Cursive writing a dying art

Published: Dec. 30, 2008 at 3:02 PM

SACRAMENTO, Dec. 30 (UPI) -- Many students increasingly are illiterate when it comes to cursive writing and choose instead to print their words, say U.S. teachers.

"It's a bit like going for a root canal for them," said Mark Bradley, an English and history teacher at Rio Tierra Junior High in Sacramento, Calif.

Bradley and other teachers says the digital age threatens to make penmanship skills like cursive writing extinct, The Sacramento (Calif.) Bee reported Tuesday.

When the SAT added a handwritten essay to its 2006 exam, only 15 percent of the nearly 1.5 million students wrote their answers in cursive, said the College Board.

Cursive, while still taught in many schools, increasingly is rejected by students, and some younger teachers, who use computers, e-mail and text messaging to communicate, the Bee reported.

What does that mean for future generations of students?

"Unless you use it, you lose it," said Susie Schaffer, a retired third-grade teacher in Folsom, Calif.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Study: No cellphone cancer link found
UPI NewsTrack Business
App turns iPhones into musical instruments
Experts: Holidays good time for job hunt
Report: Apple buys music streamer
Six ailing U.S. banks shuttered
Study: Medicare cut before, reforms real
fark
The FCC momentarily comes to its senses, but wants to assure eveyone that it won't last
To save the Earth get rid of Christmas
The annual "YOUR CHRISTMAS TREE WILL KILL YOU AND EAT YOUR DOG" article. Be afraid. Be very afraid...
If you notice an eight-foot red weather balloon today while you're driving around, please let Fark...
It's hard to believe, but burglars are still getting caught after dropping their cell phones during...
Happy National Ninja Day