The national education standards, Common Core, aimed to kill
the teaching of cursive. But is not dead—just
wounded.
Yesterday, I did a radio interview on WHO in DesMoines. WHO
bills itself as the “America’s #1 Audio Company.” I remember fondly listening
to WHO over the three years when I lived in Iowa many years ago. The Justin
Brady Radio Show people had read one of my articles on why teaching cursive to
children is valuable, and they wanted to explore things further. As many people
know the Common Core standards did away with the teaching of cursive,
presumably because it is not relevant in the digital age where children write
by tapping a screen or keyboard.
My state of Texas, notable for doing its own thing, has
refused to endorse Common Core, but still the state did not require the
teaching of cursive. Now Texas mandates the teaching of cursive. In accordance with the state's new school
guidelines, second graders will be taught how to write cursive letters before
advancing to third grade, where they'll be expected to "write complete
words, thoughts and answers legibly in cursive writing leaving appropriate
spaces between words." When students get to fourth grade, they'll be
required to write all of their assignments in cursive.
Justin Brady wanted to
know what I thought about all this. My first reaction was this: “If we don’t
need to teach cursive, why do we need to teach printing by hand?” Cursive is
just a refinement of printing letters. Why don’t we just show them pictures of the
letters and teach them to punch a key for the letters? In fact, that may well
be the next educational “reform.”
We teach printing so
kids can more easily learn their ABCs. We could teach ABCs by showing children
which letters to tap on a screen. Maybe in some states that think they are so
progressive, the teaching of printing letters will be on the way out. However,
the reason learning to print letters by hand matters is that it demands mental
engagement. A child has to think about the structure of each letter, and in the
process of thinking about how to draw it, learns and remembers what the letters
look like. Hand printing is an example of the “production effect” principle
that benefits memory. We remember things better if we reproduce the learning,
either by drawing, writing, or telling. One of the fundamental but unheralded
principles of learning is that the best way to remember anything is to think
about it.
Learning cursive builds
on this principle and provides additional benefits. Cursive has two special
advantages over printing: it promotes a higher-level mental development, and it
can nurture a child’s emotions and motivation for learning and achievement.
Brain Development
Cursive should be easy
to learn once one knows how to print letters, because there are many good books
explaining the slight modifications needed to turn printed letters into script.
But cursive demands more hand-eye coordination, a change in brain wiring that
creates the mental infrastructure for many later uses in real life. Hand-finger
dexterity becomes crucial in later life if a child wants to play a musical
instrument, excel in sports, manipulate tools, or even master a computer
keyboard. In my blog post that Justin had read, I had described how writing in
cursive activated many more areas of brain than mere printing. It is training
the brain to recruit neural resources to solve problems.
Excelling at cursive
does another important thing. The learner has to pay more attention and focus
on what needs to be done to make each letter and attractive. To do a good job
at cursive requires self-discipline. Who can argue that kids don’t need to
learn focus and self-discipline? Our multi-tasking culture is teaching kids to
be scatterbrained. All kids have some level of attention deficit.
Learning cursive successfully also incidentally programs the
brain for the habit of deliberate practice. Deliberate practice is a mental
heuristic that enables a person to pay attention to the details of what is
needed to improve a skill. If an adult wants to improve her golf game, she has
to do more than just repeat a swing of the club. She has to think about what is
the best way to improve the swing with each attempt.
Motivational
Benefit
Learning to write
cursive well has enormous motivational and emotional benefits. First, writing
cursive is a form of drawing, and children naturally love to draw. The child
happily takes ownership of their cursive creations, being proud of having a
skill that generates such elegant writing. They can even develop a personal style,
which is gratifying in their limited world that demands so much conformity.
They discover that they have powers of mastery, which motivates them to do
better in other school work. Of course, they also discover the practical
benefit of cursive, which is that they can write much faster than printing,
which helps them greatly in taking schoolwork notes.
In recalling my own
childhood, I remember that I did not like school until the seventh grade. Before
then I hated school and made poor grades. It may have been no accident that I
started to like school and make all As in that year when I also had a couple
months of penmanship class. I knew how to write cursive earlier, but penmanship
taught me how to write cursive that was attractive, not perhaps as elegant as
the script in the Declaration of Independence, but still something I created
that I could be proud of. I still have attractive cursive today.
So, I say “hats off” to
states like Texas that are restoring the hallowed place of cursive in
elementary education. My only criticism is that second graders are not likely
to have the brain development and hand-eye coordination required to create
attractive cursive. Children need refresher instruction when they are older, as
I was lucky enough to get in a couple months of the seventh grade. If a child
does not learn to do cursive well, many of the emotional and motivational
benefits do not occur. In fact, if their cursive is ugly and unreadable, the
emotions are negative.
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