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The pen might be mightier than the sword, but it could soon be just as relevant.
There is a growing concern among educators and parents in the United States regarding the lack of cursive writing skills among young people. This decline is attributed to the diminishing importance of handwriting in today’s digital era.
This handwriting illiteracy has in turn made them unable to perform basic adult tasks.
“My 20 year-old-granddaughter struggles to sign a check,” Kimberly Jacovino of Monroe, Connecticut, lamented to the Daily Mail.
Dr. Lori Koerner, a top official at the Riverhead Central School District in New York, has noted the prevalence of secondary students and job applicants who are unable to sign important documents. This deficiency in cursive writing is posing practical challenges for many individuals.
These observations are supported by a recent study conducted by OnePoll in 2021, which revealed that a significant number of Americans struggle to decipher handwritten notes, with 70% reporting difficulty in reading their colleagues’ handwriting and 45% admitting they have trouble interpreting their own handwriting.
Meanwhile, over 30% of survey respondents said that their illegible handwriting would make them anxious about writing on a board in front of colleagues. Others have said signing important documents would be stressful without the ability to write in cursive.
Experts have blamed this trend on the rise of digital technology, which has seen teachers increasingly swap the pen out for the keyboard in the classroom.
This proliferation of digital discourse is being blamed resulted in lower IQs, which decreased for the first time in the US in decades.
Last year, scientists at the University of Oregon and Northwestern discovered that IQ scores had dropped sharply, which they chalked up to technology decreasing attention spans and negating the need to think deeply about subjects.
Meanwhile, Hetty Roessingh, a professor emerita of education at the University of Calgary claimed that even five-year-olds are falling behind as the classroom becomes increasingly saturated with this IQ-sapping tech.
Conversely, a new study by Norwegian scientists found that penmanship boosts boost brain connectivity, particularly across regions responsible for learning and memory. This is in part, due to the fact, that it’s a fine motor skill rather than a simple point-and-swipe operation of an iPad or other digital device.
“When writing by hand, most of the brain is active,” said lead author Audrey van der Meer, who teaches neuropsychology at Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). “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.”
Unfortunately, like a muscle that atrophies when not exercising, these declining rates of pen use have made this skill diminish to the point that experts fear it’s going to go extinct.
“It is like the telephone on the wall,” Tracy Bendish, an ABA autism therapist for Jefferson Public Schools told Daily Mail. “Less and less used and then not there anymore.”
In order to save the skill from extirpation, education experts are urging schools to reintegrate cursive into their curriculums. Many education centers stopped teaching handwriting in 2010 with the Common Core State Standards initiative, which prioritized math and reading over cursive as they felt it was irrelevant compared to typing when it came to applicable adult skills.
Recently California and New York have passed new legislative bills requiring students aged six to 12 years old to learn cursive writing.
Democratic assemblywoman Sharon Quirk-Silva claimed that it was essential for students to not only be able to write in cursive but to read it as well.
Along with signing checks and other documents, cursive proficiency is necessary for being able to decipher certain documents like the Declaration Of Independence and the “Diary Of Anne Franke,” experts argue.
“If handwriting becomes extinct, it would be a major loss to understanding history or connecting with our past,” Roessingh said.
Dr. Lori Koerner summed up the importance of cursive like this: “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.”