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Has technology ruined handwriting?

 
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nomad soul



Joined: 31 Jan 2010
Posts: 11454
Location: The real world

PostPosted: Sat Jul 27, 2013 6:22 am    Post subject: Has technology ruined handwriting? Reply with quote

"Blame keyboards? A 2012 study found that 33% of people had difficulty reading their own handwriting."

I agree that heavy keyboard use has messed up my handwriting. I used to think both my cursive and printed writing forms lost their graceful and legible quality because I was getting older. But when I noticed how nice my elderly parents' handwriting was, I realized I couldn't blame my age.

Has technology ruined handwriting?
By Matthew Casey, Special to CNN | July 26, 2013
Source: http://edition.cnn.com/2013/07/26/tech/web/impact-technology-handwriting/index.html?hpt=hp_mid

(CNN) -- Semi-ambidextrous Nicholas Cronquist rebelled against third-grade cursive lessons. "I remember I hated it and I told my teacher I thought it was dumb," he says. Cronquist, now 26, eventually learned to like using his left hand to inscribe strings of words. But typing papers while at the University of North Dakota and choosing a career rooted in technology drastically decreased the amount he wrote by hand, causing writing in cursive to become uncomfortable and painful. So he switched to printing right-handed while still signing his name with the left. "I don't even think I know how to write in cursive anymore," says Cronquist, who now lives and works in Laos.

Technology is constantly increasing communication speeds, often anticipating words before our brains can send signals to our fingers. But experts say handwriting is being sacrificed for the sake of technology's convenience. People like Cronquist say they communicate so much via laptops, phones and tablets that they rarely need to scribble a handwritten note. This trend is reinforced by a 2012 study that found 33% of people had difficulty reading their own handwriting. Docmail, a UK-based printing and mailing company, conducted the study and concluded that one in three participants had not been required to produce something in handwriting for more than half a year. It also found that updating calendars, phone books and reminder notes was more likely to be completed without using a pen. Finally, more than half of participants said their handwriting was noticeably declining.

The state of handwriting in the United States, which celebrates National Handwriting Day every January 23 -- John Hancock's birthday -- is not much better, says Wendy Carlson, a handwriting expert and forensic document examiner. Carlson works as an expert court witness, maintaining offices in Denver and Dallas. She says the dramatic decline of handwriting is causing "great" deterioration of the mind. "Texting played a role in it because people are trying to write quick short sentences," she says. "People aren't using their minds and they are relying on technology to make the decisions for them." Carlson says cursive writing combines mental and physical processes which involve both sides of the brain. She says she's noticed that the number of people who write cursive decreases as technology becomes the most dominant means of communication. "If you are typing or texting, it's a matter of punching and finger-moving," she says. "You are doing very little thinking because you are not allowing your brain to form neural processes."

Jan Olsen is the founder and president of Handwriting Without Tears, a company that creates handwriting curriculum guides and workbooks for teachers and students from kindergarten through fifth grade. She says handwriting, especially cursive, is viewed as old-fashioned by some. "The only reason to write anything is to retrieve it later," she said. "So you need to have it legible."

Cursive requirements in U.S. public schools have declined as access to technology increases. Alabama, California, Georgia, Idaho, Massachusetts and North Carolina require cursive and several other states are considering it. The Washington Post reported in April that 45 states have adopted common core standards for education. Such standards are designed to provoke thought while at the same time preparing students to pass standardized tests, but they do not include a cursive learning requirement. In other words, many kids today are growing up without having to learn the looping, elegant script that was demanded of their parents and grandparents.

Going forward, it will be up to individual states to decide whether to require cursive and then up to school districts to make it a focal part of the curriculum. Burdened by budget cuts, it is likely many states and districts will choose to have students type instead of write.

Olsen, 72, says the writing styles used in technology and handwriting conflict. Texts and instant messages require use of communication English, while writing requires use of standard English, she says. "To achieve in the world, people need to use standard (English)." But the irony is that Olsen, who communicates via text message on her iPhone, says Handwriting Without Tears must be tech-savvy to remain competitive. In addition to its workbooks, the company offers an electronic teaching guide and an app. "At work we have technology up the kazoo," she says.

Francis Smith, a bank officer living in Gibraltar, says that while technology allows instantaneous communication, he is nostalgic about handwriting due to its permanence and tangibility. "If there is no electricity, none of (technology) will work," he says. "Notebooks have served us for a couple thousand years."

Smith, a former civil servant, used to write for work, but has spent the last 23 years typing on a PC. He says it has negatively impacted his handwriting to the point that people would never guess he won a handwriting contest when he was a child. "It's a shame that now when you write quickly it looks like it's by someone who has not had an education," he says. Smith, 52, says he's started using a fountain pen to try to improve his penmanship. "It's got a lovely feel to it," he says. "It's not very practical."

Smith says he wants to recapture his ability to write cursive. Cronquist, however, is happy that printing allows him to write legibly. "My right-handed printing is not too terrible," he says. "It's slow, but readable."

(End of article)
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sparks



Joined: 20 Feb 2008
Posts: 632

PostPosted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 11:09 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I only find it difficult to read my own handwriting when I scribble in the multi-word answers to listenings in New Market Leader. Talk about having to write fast Smile
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scot47



Joined: 10 Jan 2003
Posts: 15343

PostPosted: Sat Aug 03, 2013 5:03 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Met a 19-year-old with good school results who confessed that he was never taught to read "joined-up handwriting" ! In Scotland - in 2013 !!!!!!!!!!!!!
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HLJHLJ



Joined: 06 Oct 2009
Posts: 1218
Location: Ecuador

PostPosted: Sat Aug 03, 2013 5:36 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

My handwriting has always been dreadful, my main memory from primary school was being kept in at breaks to copy pages and pages of letters for hand writing practice. It didn't seem to help much. So I don't think it could deteriorate much from a base line of 'illegible'.

I do think technology is making my spelling worse though. With auto-correct and spell check I barely pay attention to spelling anymore. So when I do have to spell an irregular word out I find myself struggling or second guessing myself more often now. I'm sure it's lack of practice.
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scot47



Joined: 10 Jan 2003
Posts: 15343

PostPosted: Sat Aug 03, 2013 7:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The use of writing and texts will wither away and become an ar5acne subject for weirdos, nerds and geeks.
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Professional TEFLer



Joined: 09 May 2013
Posts: 77

PostPosted: Wed Aug 07, 2013 7:20 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Yes, technology has ruined handwriting. Sad but true. Sad
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artemisia



Joined: 04 Nov 2008
Posts: 875
Location: the world

PostPosted: Thu Aug 08, 2013 12:59 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

HLJHLJ wrote:
..I do think technology is making my spelling worse though. With auto-correct and spell check I barely pay attention to spelling anymore. So when I do have to spell an irregular word out I find myself struggling or second guessing myself more often now. I'm sure it's lack of practice.

This is what's also said about doing calculations in your head (or on paper) as opposed to using calculators. People lose the ability to do simple calculations.

My hand printing is not great either. It's tidy when I really apply myself and make an effort, otherwise it looks like a scrawl. But my writing in cursive is much more orderly or it used to be. I appreciate typed scripts from students whenever I get them! I don't have to spend time trying to decipher individual words along with everything else. Some students write or print beautifully, though, and I admire their handwriting.
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Sashadroogie



Joined: 17 Apr 2007
Posts: 11061
Location: Moskva, The Workers' Paradise

PostPosted: Thu Aug 08, 2013 4:19 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

This is all part of a Piggie plot to control how we communicate with each other. Pen, paper, printing press - these are all basic means, which are very hard to control by governments. The Internet, social media, mobile phones etc., are all so dependent on infrastructure, they are susceptible to government control, and vulnerable to attack.

Don't let spurious claims that Twitter liberated the Arab Spring peoples fool you into believing that this tech is a force for liberty. It didn't, and it isn't. In any case the local governments in those Arab lands were just stooges of the real Piggie powers. Try organising resistance in the UK, ans see what will happen.

We are witnessing the death of free communication and freedom of expression. Loss of handwriting is just one obvious aspect of how we are being manipulated. Our claviers are chains! Bring back ink and quills and guarantee our liberty!
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artemisia



Joined: 04 Nov 2008
Posts: 875
Location: the world

PostPosted: Thu Aug 08, 2013 10:52 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I like the global aspect of this site, which would be a lot harder to achieve with a series of handwritten notes! But then, I'd pity anyone who had to read my handwriting. I do make a particular effort when writing notes to students and have sometimes rewritten them from scratch.

You can't recall a text or email when sent, though and that can be a worry along with security issues. Perhaps in the end we'll all forget how to use pens and pencils and lose the requisite motor skills to control them.
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kev7161



Joined: 06 Feb 2004
Posts: 5880
Location: Suzhou, China

PostPosted: Sun Aug 18, 2013 4:33 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

In our 1st and 2nd grade primary school, we teach manuscript to the students. One 40-minute lesson a week + a workbook to work on throughout the week, plus print offs for the weekend for points upon return.

In our 3rd grade, we teach cursive, same pattern as above.

In 4th, 5th, and 6th grade we give them workbooks and worksheets, but they are expected to do the assigned work on their own when they have spare time.

Personally, when I give them written assignments (at 5th grade), I'll make them write a final copy in cursive and they are given points for neatness, among other criteria.

We don't allow calculators in math class and I always ask my students to show their work unless I feel mental math is acceptable.

They also have a computer class in 4th grade (keyboarding), 5th grade (Microsoft Word) and 6th grade (Power Point), so everything is being covered.

I like the OP's article. I'll show that to my teachers when they ask why we bother teaching handwriting!
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