Disaster America's fight to save handwriting from extinction as IQs begin to fall for first time ever - and teachers warn some 20-year-olds can't sign checks anymore

  • Americans reported they hadn't written a note or personal letter in five years
  • People are having a hard time reading their own and others' handwriting
  • Studies show writing can increase the brain's cognitive abilities

Several US states are trying to prevent handwriting from going extinct as classrooms increasingly swap pen and paper for tablets and computers.

The US government removed the skill from the core curriculum in 2010 due to claims it was time consuming and would not be useful in the age of technology which meant schools could instead focus on typing classes.

Handwriting is considered a fine motor skill that stimulates and challenges the brain, but with schools turning to technology instead, some teachers are complaining students can barely hold a pencil but can swipe and double-click on their devices.

Students with learning disabilities like dysgraphia - when children can read but have trouble writing letters - can also be affected because methods of overcoming the disability requires them to practice writing by hand.

Previous studies have revealed that IQ scores have dropped for the first time in a century and indicated that technology could be to blame.

Teachers, parents and experts who DailyMail.com spoke to said they were seeing kids and young adults who don't know how to sign their name or read cursive.

Experts have urged schools to re-introduce cursive into the curriculum, citing the need to understand historical documents. Pictured: Cursive written before it was removed from the common core standard in 2010

New legislative bills have been passed in states like California and New York requiring students aged six to 12 years old to learn cursive writing, but others are still advancing in state legislature while some are still hesitant to revert back including Colorado, New Mexico and Nevada.

'I wish [students] would learn how to write in cursive,' Tracy Bendish, an ABA autism therapist for Jefferson Public Schools told DailyMail.com.

'But it is like the telephone on the wall,' she said. 'Less and less used and then not there anymore.'

There is a big educational disparity between schools that readily have access to gadgets versus those that don't, causing what's called the digital divide.

Students who have better access to technology will have better educational success than those who don't, which is particularly concerning as more teachers turn to technology in their courses.

'The digital divide has affected individual students in the same school as well as groups of students across districts, lowering the academic outcomes of low-income, underserved students and districts,' according to American University.

Last year, researchers at the University of Oregon and Northwestern reported that IQ scores had dropped because technology shortens attention spans and decreases the need to think deeply.

Experts have been urging governments and school administrators to bring handwriting back to schools, citing sixth graders who have trouble holding a pencil but can use digital devices with ease.

Dr. Lori Koerner, the assistant superintendent for the Riverhead Central School District in New York, told DailyMail.com that it is essential for elementary and middle schoolers to be taught cursive.

'Though technology has its benefits, children need to be able to read cursive in the event a document is presented to them along their journey.

'They most certainly, at the very least, need to know how to sign their name,' Koerner said.

'I have encountered too many secondary students and employment candidates who cannot sign documents relative to their onboarding process.'

Teachers and coworkers continue to struggle with ineligible handwriting, and a 2021 survey conducted by OnePoll on behalf of Bic USA Inc. found that 45 percent of Americans struggle to read their own handwriting while a shocking 70 percent reported that they have trouble reading notes or reports from their coworkers.

Some people have expressed similar views, saying that signing important documents will become a stressful practice without the ability to write cursive.

'My 20 year-old-granddaughter struggles to sign a check,' said Kimberly Jacovino of Monroe, Connecticut.

'It is very important and should be brought back to all schools,' she added.

In the wake of turning to keyboarding instead of writing by hand, educators found students' IQ levels are shrinking and placed the blame on technology in the classroom, Psychology Today reported.

Hetty Roessingh, a professor emerita of education at the University of Calgary echoed this sentiment, saying that five-year-olds are not meeting academic benchmarks because of the accessibility of digital devices.

Roessingh has long advocated for schools to push handwriting and cursive on children because it is an important tool to engage the hand-brain complex and circuitry that induces memory and retrieving information that typing simply doesn't do.

A new study published in February by researchers at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) found that handwriting is linked to increased cognitive brain function, motor skills and memory.

'It is important to realize that the brain follows the principle of 'use it or lose it,' said Audrey van der Meer, the study's lead author and neuropsychology professor at the NTNU.

'When writing by hand, most of the brain is active,' she continued.

'This requires the brain to communicate between its active parts which, in turn, puts the brain in a state that helps both children and adults learn more and remember better,' van der Meer said.

Schools stopped teaching cursive in 2010 when most US states adopted what's called Common Core State Standards, which set benchmarks for reading and math but didn't include cursive as part of the recommended curriculum.

At the time, critics said teaching efforts would be better spent on developing new skills like coding and keyboarding while others called the writing style 'old fashioned.'

When dropping cursive from common core, lawmakers argued that cursive was time-consuming and wouldn't be as useful as other skills like typing, that students would need at they moved on to junior and high school,' a then-spokesperson for Georgia Department of Education told ABC News at the time.

Cursive also wasn't on the tests that ranked schools under the No Child Left Behind Law which was put in place by the Bush Administration in 2002 and ended in 2015.

Schools would typically gear their learning curriculum around what was required under the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) which set benchmarks for academic performance that all schools had to meet.

If they continuously failed to meet the NCLB standards, the state had the right to change the school's leadership team or even close the school.

Forty-one states adopted the common core curriculum and while individually they were able to choose to teach cursive, California and Massachusetts were among the few states to opt in.

Roughly six years later, 14 states reintroduced the writing style into all classes, and by 2019, that number grew to 20 states.

Democratic assemblywoman Sharon Quirk-Silva introduced a bill in California last year, citing the need for students to not only be able to write in cursive but to read it as well.

The California bill will go into effect for the upcoming 2024-2025 school year but similar bills are still pending in states like Kentucky where, if it's passed, would be implemented in the 2025-2026 academic year.

The push is also in response to the ever-increasing artificial intelligence technology, which Quirk-Silva believed will cause teachers to return to handwritten essay exams necessitating students' ability to write in cursive because it is faster than print.

If handwriting becomes extinct, it would be a major loss to understanding history or connecting with our past, Roessingh said.

'It is about the embodied cognition and the circuitry behind personal messages that are beneficial both for the person who wrote it and the person who read it,' she said.

Handwriting, particularly cursive, presents the idea of what's called embodied cognition, meaning it acts as a switch to lock in your memory.

This makes it increasingly important for kids to write by hand and learn cursive because they are 'essentially tactile and sensory beings who take in the world through engagement,' Roessingh explained.

More than that, a piece of history could be lost to younger generations who aren't taught to read and write cursive, leaving them unable to read major historical documents like the diary of Anne Franke, the US Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

Chelsea Hayes, a Maryland mom, said regardless of what schools decide, she plans on making sure her three-year-old daughter knows how to write in cursive when she gets older.

'I do think it's important. Not just for historical purposes, but also just as a skill. I think it's almost like learning another language,' Hayes said.

'You don't teach kids art or music because of history, though I guess there's a historical component you can put in there.

'It's just another skill I think she should have. If she never uses it, oh well. If she does, great.'

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I write in whatever the default font is for the program I'm typing stuff into. It's much quicker to type than write crap out.

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What's wrong with handwriting in print? Other than for your signature (which, in most people's cases, is already a barely-legible scribble only faintly reminiscent of script), I see no point in cursive.

Should we go back to using f's for s's?

Fneed'f feed and feed
Formerly Chuck'f
The Gofpel of Jefus Chrift.
 
Lmao they're not selling me that line of bullshit.
Why is every denialist boomer's first line of cope to blame technology?

"Yeah, you know those computer science nerds that keep modern society running?"
"Total retards on par with the genetic detritus and human waste of the third world!"
This is the one time the boomers aren't wrong. Theres a whole new generation of niggercattle raised on nothing but tiktok and tweets, and we're about to reap their retarded bounty.

Any parent who outsources their child's education and entertainment to the iGoyim deserves a long flight off a tall roof.

It's always been an annoying pain in the ass to read. I specifically remember family gatherings with old people who'd been exposed to handwriting all their lives passing pages around trying to figure out what in the living fuck was being conveyed in some old letter somebody wrote.

The whole cursive thing borders on fetishistic.
I bet you can only read and write in tab.

We were taught to write cursive in school, but over time my cursive and my print have merged into undecipherable scribbles resembling the wingdings font on acid. My handwriting has evolved to protect itself from niggerbrained pedestrians and (((government spooks))).
 
>import a bunch of third world retards, some literally inbred
>the reason IQ is lower is not our shit schools and importing retards
>it's the cursive

LMAO
Who cares if these dumbass kids can't write cursive? They can't even fucking spell, most of them use voice to text which is why you see people who ramble worse than me around.

btw the parents not knowing how to write - and presumably read - cursive either, is the trick to encouraging kids to learn this easy as fuck useless skill.
 
Well surely its the writing and not cutting education spending for the last decade?
At no point has education spending in America ever been cut lol. Not only do the school systems with the worst outcome who constantly kvetch about "muh underfunding" have far more money than ever in absolute terms, but their budgets continually increase while student count drops.

So you have places like DC, Newark, Camden, Chicago, and Detroit going from $20k to $25k to $30k per student, with like half "graduating" and fewer than half of those functionally literate, while places like North Dakota and Idaho spend $7-8k and graduate 95%.

"Education spending cuts" are yet another thing that never happened but should.
 
If we're bringing things back in schools, I would unironically really have enjoyed learning shorthand. I know it's basically learning a whole other language, and much more limited in how useful it is unless it's taught across the board so that others can read what you write, but I would kill to be able to speed up note-taking at work to that degree.

We found some notes in an old file the other day, and they were in shorthand because someone who used to work there had been able to write in it. It was like finding an old artifact, absolutely nobody could work out what it said.
 
I remember painstakingly learning cursive and, when I hit adulthood, proudly showing off my signature where every letter was written in beautiful, regal articulation... and then having to shittify it because every clerk, doctor, and secretary I met told me they couldn't read it. My current signature is just the first letter of my name and a random hand flourish. Not a single person has questioned it since.
Feels bad man. I had the same thing happen to me. Might as well just do things the Chinese way and use a stamp, sorry, a chop.
 
nah it's real, people are offloading reasoning and comprehension to google. They have no fluid intelligence anymore.
Watching people navigate cities they've lived in for decades using GPS really drives that home. These people know should every street and shortcut, optimal routing, to everything within months/years of living somewhere. Instead, they stare at GPS, waiting for it to tell them what to do. It leaves me aghast witnessing that.

𝓦𝓲𝓽𝓷𝓮𝓼𝓼 𝓶𝔂 𝓼𝓴𝓲𝓵𝓵 𝓹𝓮𝓪𝓼𝓪𝓷𝓽𝓼.
fancy cursive code.png
If you need me, I'll be in my crucibular cubicle illuminating copies of code printouts from 500 years ago by candlelight. We have no idea what an Seepluslus was, but if they spent so much time writing about it, it must have served some vital purpose. Who would waste all the time otherwise?
(Narrator: they were illuminating 28th generation copies of manuscripts containing source code that was used to build an AI girlfriend experience porn chat bot.)
 
Watching people navigate cities they've lived in for decades using GPS really drives that home. These people know should every street and shortcut, optimal routing, to everything within months/years of living somewhere. Instead, they stare at GPS, waiting for it to tell them what to do. It leaves me aghast witnessing that.


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If you need me, I'll be in my crucibular cubicle illuminating copies of code printouts from 500 years ago by candlelight. We have no idea what an Seepluslus was, but if they spent so much time writing about it, it must have served some vital purpose. Who would waste all the time otherwise?
(Narrator: they were illuminating 28th generation copies of manuscripts containing source code that was used to build an AI girlfriend experience porn chat bot.)
Nice NP++ font, nigger. Does that come in mens? Dont answer that, I think you come in men enough for all of us.

That fuckin' Javascript? Learn Holy C, it'll be at least 10 times more useful.
 
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The benefit of learning good penmanship and several styles of handwriting is that the one student who can actually do it gets to have a nice little racket charging other students to forge their parents signatures on detention slips and write notes excusing them from doing their homework.

I haven't needed it since though, and typing everything has definitely made me regress :(
 
Part of that may also be that the different types of handwriting change periodically as some genius educator decides he knows a better way to write letters and that is the way they must be taught. So if a letter's shape is changed and that is what a person is used to reading his whole life, then looking at old letters with different forms will be more difficult. Spenserian gave way to the Palmer Method which gave way to Zaner-Bloser which gave way to D'Nealian, all in the space of a century.
D'Neilian fucked up like half a generation's handwriting because they swapped the style halfway through a semester and thought it wouldn't be a problem.
 
cursive is annoying and obsolete tbh

but don't you fucking lie to me and say that writing a cursive capital 'D' is not the most cathartic thing. idk maybe i'm just a little autistic
 
Sure, I'll even say cursive was a lie back in my day; where we learned it in 3rd grade and up through 8th were told everyone uses it, blah blah blah. Only for 9th grade to hit and those teachers tell us our penmanship is so shitty they can barely read our regular print and to stick to that.
We literally learned it for a year in elementary school, learned to sign our names, then never used it for anything again. I really don't see a ton of value in cursive beyond that; it's like learning Latin.
 
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How do you do, fellow kids.

Are you telling me you little cunts don't even write exam answers these days? How does that work in practice? Do you type answers into boxes in an exam form, or is it touchscreen multiple choice bullshit like corporate "training" "assessment"?
 
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