Can you do cursive writing (US)?
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Re: Can you do cursive writing (US)?
Can I do cursive writing? Yes, I curse all the time.
- Hobbes' Choice
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Re: Can you do cursive writing (US)?
How sad. You claimed that you cannot read or write handwritten notes.Sir-Sister-of-Suck wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2017 2:10 amWhy do you find it horrifying? Is teaching children to write the same language, but in a different font, such an important milestone to their education? What practical use does it have, besides not understanding when other people use it? I think it would be far more intriguing and beneficial if we taught people to use Morse, and other basic coding.Hobbes' Choice wrote: ↑Tue Mar 14, 2017 6:55 pmChildren in the UK never stopped learning to write.
I find what this thread implies about the US educational system horrifying.
Morse code is all but redundant, handwriting is not.
You want to impose this failing onto others?
- Sir-Sister-of-Suck
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Re: Can you do cursive writing (US)?
That I can't read.... in a certain font?
Well, I'm pretty sure I can read or write hand-written print just fine.You claimed that you cannot read or write handwritten notes.
I mean, morse code is still mandatory to know in certain military fields like the traffic guard, and learning to write in basic codes certainly has benefits for things like programming. But really, I'm just showing how there are things far more important. Ultimately, I really don't think cursive has this trove of benefits that calls for you to automatically denounce the idea of those who feel they don't need to learn/teach it anymore as something 'horrifying'. The main benefit, is that you know what other people are saying when they use it - which is, ironically, only perpetuated by the problem of teaching it in the first place.Morse code is all but redundant, handwriting is not.
You want to impose this failing onto others?
People can be pretty passionate about tradition, but when boiled down, it's really just a different font. It sounds crazy to me, that anyone should be so obsessed with such a thing. Of course I realize its historical prevalence, but I wish we could put such silliness aside, and work on the things that really matter to improve the US education system going forward - like fighting against creationism and intelligent design being taught as a supplemental lesson, revising our common core entirely, and discouraging students from chasing after careers of pseudoscience like 'natural medicine'.