Disaster GEN Z NEVER LEARNED TO READ CURSIVE - Harvard students are functionally illiterate.

It was a good book, the student told the 14 others in the undergraduate seminar I was teaching, and it included a number of excellent illustrations, such as photographs of relevant Civil War manuscripts. But, he continued, those weren’t very helpful to him, because of course he couldn’t read cursive.

Had I heard him correctly? Who else can’t read cursive? I asked the class. The answer: about two-thirds. And who can’t write it? Even more. What did they do about signatures? They had invented them by combining vestiges of whatever cursive instruction they may have had with creative squiggles and flourishes. Amused by my astonishment, the students offered reflections about the place—or absence—of handwriting in their lives. Instead of the Civil War past, we found ourselves exploring a different set of historical changes. In my ignorance, I became their pupil as well as a kind of historical artifact, a Rip van Winkle confronting a transformed world.

in 2010, cursive was omitted from the new national Common Core standards for K–12 education. The students in my class, and their peers, were then somewhere in elementary school. Handwriting instruction had already been declining as laptops and tablets and lessons in “keyboarding” assumed an ever more prominent place in the classroom. Most of my students remembered getting no more than a year or so of somewhat desultory cursive training, which was often pushed aside by a growing emphasis on “teaching to the test.” Now in college, they represent the vanguard of a cursiveless world.

Although I was unaware of it at the time, the 2010 Common Core policy on cursive had generated an uproar. Jeremiads about the impending decline of civilization appeared in The Atlantic, The New Yorker, The New York Times, and elsewhere. Defenders of script argued variously that knowledge of cursive was “a basic right,” a key connection between hand and brain, an essential form of self-discipline, and a fundamental expression of identity. Its disappearance would represent a craven submission to “the tyranny of ‘relevance.’ ”

Within a decade, cursive’s embattled advocates had succeeded in passing measures requiring some sort of cursive instruction in more than 20 states. At the same time, the struggle for cursive became part of a growing, politicized nostalgia for a lost past. In 2016, Louisiana’s state senators reminded their constituents that the Declaration of Independence had been written in cursive and cried out “America!” as they unanimously voted to restore handwriting instruction across the state.

Yet the decline in cursive seems inevitable. Writing is, after all, a technology, and most technologies are sooner or later surpassed and replaced. As Tamara Plakins Thornton demonstrates in her book Handwriting in America, it has always been affected by changing social and cultural forces. In 18th-century America, writing was the domain of the privileged. By law or custom, the enslaved were prohibited from literacy almost everywhere. In New England, nearly all men and women could read; in the South, which had not developed an equivalent system of common schools, a far lower percentage of even the white population could do so. Writing, though, was much less widespread—taught separately and sparingly in colonial America, most often to men of status and responsibility and to women of the upper classes. Men and women even learned different scripts—an ornamental hand for ladies, and an unadorned, more functional form for the male world of power and commerce.

The first half of the 19th century saw a dramatic increase in the number of women able to write. By 1860, more than 90 percent of the white population in America could both read and write. At the same time, romantic and Victorian notions of subjectivity steadily enhanced the perceived connection between handwriting and identity. Penmanship came to be seen as a marker and expression of the self—of gender and class, to be sure, but also of deeper elements of character and soul. The notion of a signature as a unique representation of a particular individual gradually came to be enshrined in the law and accepted as legitimate legal evidence.

By the turn of the 20th century, the typewriter had become sufficiently established to prompt the first widespread declarations of the obsolescence of handwriting. But it would be a long demise. In 1956, Look magazine pronounced handwriting “out-of-date,” yet cursive still claimed a secure place in the curriculum for decades.

given a current generation of students in which so few can read or write cursive, one cannot assume it will ever again serve as an effective form of communication. I asked my students about the implications of what they had told me, focusing first on their experience as students. No, most of these history students admitted, they could not read manuscripts. If they were assigned a research paper, they sought subjects that relied only on published sources. One student reshaped his senior honors thesis for this purpose; another reported that she did not pursue her interest in Virginia Woolf for an assignment that would have involved reading Woolf’s handwritten letters. In the future, cursive will have to be taught to scholars the way Elizabethan secretary hand or paleography is today.

I continued questioning: Didn’t professors make handwritten comments on their papers and exams? Many of the students found these illegible. Sometimes they would ask a teacher to decipher the comments; more often they just ignored them. Most faculty, especially after the remote instruction of the pandemic, now grade online. But I wondered how many of my colleagues have been dutifully offering handwritten observations without any clue that they would never be read.

What about handwriting in your personal lives? I went on. One student reported that he had to ask his parents to “translate” handwritten letters from his grandparents. I asked the students if they made grocery lists, kept journals, or wrote thank-you or condolence letters. Almost all said yes. Almost all said they did so on laptops and phones or sometimes on paper in block letters. For many young people, “handwriting,” once essentially synonymous with cursive, has come to mean the painstaking printing they turn to when necessity dictates.

During my years as Harvard president, I regarded the handwritten note as a kind of superpower. I wrote hundreds of them and kept a pile of note cards in the upper-left-hand drawer of my desk. They provided a way to reach out and say: I am noticing you. This message of thanks or congratulations or sympathy comes not from some staff person or some machine but directly from me. I touched it and hope it touches you. Now I wonder how many recipients of these messages could not read them.

“There is something charming about receiving a handwritten note,” one student acknowledged. Did he mean charming like an antique curiosity? Charming in the sense of magical in its capacity to create physical connections between human minds? Charming as in establishing an aura of the original, the unique, and the authentic? Perhaps all of these. One’s handwriting is an expression, an offering of self. Crowds still throng athletes, politicians, and rock stars for autographs. We have not yet abandoned our attraction to handwriting as a representation of presence: George Washington, or Beyoncé, or David Ortiz wrote here!

there is a great deal of the past we are better off without, just as there is much to celebrate in the devices that have served as the vehicles of cursive’s demise. But there are dangers in cursive’s loss. Students will miss the excitement and inspiration that I have seen them experience as they interact with the physical embodiment of thoughts and ideas voiced by a person long since silenced by death. Handwriting can make the past seem almost alive in the present.

In the papers of Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., I once found a small fragment with his scribbled name and his father’s address. Holmes had emphasized the significance of this small piece of paper by attaching it to a larger page with a longer note—also in his own hand—which he saved as a relic for posterity. He had written the words in 1862 on the battlefield of Antietam, where he had been wounded, he explained, and had pinned the paper to his uniform lest he become one of the Civil War’s countless Unknown.

But sometimes handwritten documents tell stories that their creators neither intended nor understood. James Henry Hammond maintained a ledger in which he kept scrawled records of the births and deaths of the enslaved population on his South Carolina plantation. Because he included the names of the newborns’ parents and often some additional commentary, it was possible for me to reconstruct family ties among generations of people forbidden to keep their own written history. At one point, Hammond purchased an 8-year-old boy named Sam Jones to work in the house, changing his name to “Wesley” in the process. Nearly three decades later, Hammond recorded the birth of a son to Wesley—a child to whom Wesley had given the name “Sam Jones.” As he recorded the baby’s birth, Hammond was in all likelihood unaware of Sam/Wesley’s act of memory and resistance. More than a century and a half later, we can still say Sam Jones’s name.

All of us, not just students and scholars, will be affected by cursive’s loss. The inability to read handwriting deprives society of direct access to its own past. We will become reliant on a small group of trained translators and experts to report what history—including the documents and papers of our own families—was about. The spread of literacy in the early modern West was driven by people’s desire to read God’s word for themselves, to be empowered by an experience of unmediated connection. The abandonment of cursive represents a curious reverse parallel: We are losing a connection, and thereby disempowering ourselves.

On the last day of class, a student came up to me with a copy of one of my books and asked me to sign it. I wrote an inscription that included not just his name and mine, but thanks for his many contributions to the seminar. Then I asked, a little wistfully, if he’d like me to read it to him.

 
My Cyrillic cursive is halfway decent, I don't have much of a problem writing it. Ironically, my English cursive only became legible when I took Russian and had to practice penmanship as a slightly older student. (Yes, I am a leftie and I feel all y'all's pain.)

However, reading that shit? It is to writing what the Swedish Chef is to speaking... hurpty durpty lurpty hurpty.

I think part of the problem as a native English speaker is that, like, @Übertroon does not have particularly good handwriting, but I can read it without any problems because I can mentally fill in the unclear pieces.

Whereas with Cyrillic, I don't know any Cyrillic-using languages well enough to make an educated guess about the contents. Even knowing where each letter begins and ends is sometimes a total goddamn mystery to me.
 
It baffled me … maybe I’m just dim :) yeah that makes sense, it was like extra bits, but I couldn’t read any of the samples I was given without really sitting down and thinking about it. I bet the spies getting better training. I would unironically like to attend the DoD language classes, apparently their Russian one is amazing but they’re all extremely good.
Many years ago when an associate dean at DLI we offered language training on a space-available basis to tuition-paying civilian non-DoD students. Remember one lady graduating from our Italian course. Had another lady, former San Francisco newscaster, graduate from our Spanish course. Both languages were taught in the school I was associate dean of at the time. Not sure if this is done anymore. These courses are very intensive and I believe they are the best in the USA - six hours a day, five days a week for 27 to 64 weeks, depending on the difficulty of the language. Spanish would be 27 weeks, Korean 64. Graduated from the Korean course, at that time 47 weeks, nearly 50 years ago.
 
What a bunch of retarded niggers. Everyone I know knows cursive
Where? At the old folks home?
Both of my parents are absolute peak Boomers born in the 1950s and I have never seen either of them write a single thing in cursive other than signing a receipt. They both strangely like writing in all-caps but honestly it's more legible that way.

This goofy, useless, and time-consuming style of writing needs to die and good riddance. I remember it pissed me off back in grade school having to do all those dumb-ass loops and swirls to write a goddamn S or F or G when I could print it in a fraction of the time.

I am a bit weird though, I write my "S" from bottom-up rather than the top-down I was taught. Just feels more natural.
My parents were both born in 1949. My mom's handwriting was ok but by dads was terrible. I couldn't even read it most of the time and had to ask him what it said. It was like a mix of print and cursive. He didn't write whole words in cursive. They were the types that thought not being able to write in cursive made you look uneducated or stupid.

It's dead already man. Most Millennials can't write it and Zoomers can't read it. Though I find the fact that they can't read it to be a bit ridiculous. It does make me wonder if some of that is because of poor penmanship. If you look at well written cursive a lot of the letters still resemble their print counterparts and if they don't you can look at the rest of the word and kind of figure it out. It's like deciphering a code or something.
While there are arguments to be made that cursive may not be useful in the real world now that everything is digital, I still think it's a good thing to be taught as it forces discipline on young students. I'd say being forced to learn it helps shape you to be a better person and less like a nigger you see chimp out in schools so often these days.
Ok Boomer.
 
A Harvard administrator is so crushingly behind the times that they thought that children could still read cursive. Schools stopped teaching it decades ago, which means this long winded moron has been blissfully ignorant about their own students for at least 30 years.

I would delete this article and pretend it was never written.
 
I don't know, I know both how to read and write cursive, because in Poland that's the standard way of teaching kids to write and read even today. This is what happens when instead of keeping the more difficult but more useful things in the education system you throw them out and teach something simpler to all the kids because Tyrone has a two-digit IQ and it would be racist to force him to learn something so difficult like writing in cursive.
Funny you should mention that. The only place I've seen cursive used recently is in the Polish language books I got for Christmas. I was actually kind of surprised. You'd never see that here in the US.
 
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Hot take: cursive needs to go. Handwriting needs to be legible for everyone. Obviously this shouldn't go to the next extreme and we return to people signing their name with an X but still. Doctors especially need to stop writing in cursive.
 
It's dead already man. Most Millennials can't write it and Zoomers can't read it. Though I find the fact that they can't read it to be a bit ridiculous. It does make me wonder if some of that is because of poor penmanship. If you look at well written cursive a lot of the letters still resemble their print counterparts and if they don't you can look at the rest of the word and kind of figure it out. It's like deciphering a code or something.
It's not hard at all to read if it's well-written, although if you never had any exposure to it at all it's kind of a remedial exercise to learn it. However, unless you're working with original historical documents you're not going to run into it much if at all.

Cursive letters aren't THAT different from block letters.
Ok Boomer.
Nothing will motivate students more than being forced to learn something that is completely and utterly useless.
 
Hot take: cursive needs to go. Handwriting needs to be legible for everyone. Obviously this shouldn't go to the next extreme and we return to people signing their name with an X but still. Doctors especially need to stop writing in cursive.
I doubt Ford is gonna change their logo anytime soon.
 
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I can't write in cursive anymore, shit takes too long to do for me despite me being able to do it back in grade school. I can read it though. However,I also have no degree because no connections or money. Society is a fuck.

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You made me remeber this from several years back, lol.
jesus fuck what even is this signature lmao
 
I have never seen anyone from the last few generations actually write legitimate cursive with the exception of one individual I know even though I was schooled in cursive.
Teachers in highschool would just make incoherent scribbles as their signature (a tradition subsequent generations carry out)
 
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Hot take: cursive needs to go. Handwriting needs to be legible for everyone. Obviously this shouldn't go to the next extreme and we return to people signing their name with an X but still. Doctors especially need to stop writing in cursive.
There is more to this about doctors and other aspects of their writing as I think there was a documentary/report I read years ago about the why's they did this. But yes Doctors need to be responsible with their hand writing as deaths have happen for misdirection of medication needed for a patient.

And IMHO all of this Crazy Signatures (in the US) is because of JOHN HANCOCK, one of THE big dogs in the formation of the United States. That is why for many years you had the phrase, "put your John Hancock here". Signifying your personal signature on legal documents.

This is probably part 1 as this hits a sore spot with me with ignorant people coming from Generation Fail. The reason why it bothers me is what I see from people in Silicon Valley today. Otherwise my opinion stands as quoted above.
 
Hot take: cursive needs to go. Handwriting needs to be legible for everyone. Obviously this shouldn't go to the next extreme and we return to people signing their name with an X but still. Doctors especially need to stop writing in cursive.
I agree! I had a whole class in middle school on cursive back in the 90s. That's feels about the equivalent of taking a punch card or rotary phone dialing class at the time.
 
Fuck cursive, I'm glad its dying and soon to be dead. Cursive is the pinnacle of form over function. Your letters are completely unintelligible, a single smosh makes them basically unreadable, the more the paper ages, the less likely they are to actuall survive in a readable/legible form and they literally kill 7000 people a year but damn they sure do look cool!

Yes, I understand cursive once served a purpose with quills and yes, I agree that for the sake of historical and linguistic posterity philologers should keep it alive, but there's absolutely no reason to teach it to regular people especially as part of a standard curiculum. Knowing that mitochondria are the powerhouse of the cell is unironically more useful than knowing cursive.

Or more accurately what I've seen is people make up some random shit, and then just practice making that over and over. It literally doesn't even have to resemble your name.
Yes. I can vouch for this.
 
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Even after leaving school, I have to write things down and take notes on a daily basis. I find that cursive is way faster and less strenuous when you have to write a lot in a short amount of time, so all my personal notes and files are in cursive. Even with modern ball point pen, it's faster to not lift the pen off the paper for each character in the word. The objective is not to look perfectly formed and shaped like a handwriting exercise book, just legible and fast.

I have noticed that the overwhelming majority of people are now cursive illiterate, so anything I write for public-facing purposes I do in print letters.
 
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