Michigan
Related: About this forumBill would encourage Michigan schools to teach cursive handwriting again
(Detroit Free Press) If you can write comfortably in cursive, you have a leg up on this Free Press reporter and likely many students who have been through public schooling in Michigan in recent years but lawmakers want to give schools a chance to reverse that trend.
House Bill 4064 would recommend the Michigan Department of Education develop a cursive handwriting instruction plan for public schools in Michigan. The department would also be directed to make the plan available to public schools for the start of the 2024-25 school year.
The bill does not mandate the department to create a plan, but it would be strongly encouraged to do so. A legislative analysis of the bill conducted by the House Fiscal Agency found the MDE already has a cursive instruction model program it can implement. School districts would then also be strongly encouraged but again, not mandated to adopt the cursive instruction plan. Twenty-one states currently require some form of cursive instruction in public schools, according to the National Education Association.
Michigans most recent standards, that were adopted in 2010, dont require cursive instruction.
While cursive instruction isnt mandated in Michigans public schools, it remains a requirement in many Catholic schools The Archdiocese of Detroit, Diocese of Grand Rapids and Diocese of Lansing all contain cursive instruction as a curriculum standard for their elementary students. ...............(more)
https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2023/03/27/cursive-handwriting-michigan-public-schools/70045137007/
Crazyleftie
(458 posts)Mister Ed
(6,390 posts)EYESORE 9001
(27,619 posts)Your final test involves reading Rx straight from the doctors scribbling device.
Haggard Celine
(17,044 posts)People should know how to write in cursive (and read it). I wouldn't send my kid to a Catholic school, but they are usually way ahead in curriculum, or at least they've kept some of the old classes. I guess I might send them there if the public schools were really bad. But I would look for other private schools. It's a moot point, though. I'll never have kids.
Biophilic
(4,989 posts)I believe it was and continues to be a real travesty not to teach young people this skill. Life skills that can be used throughout ones life are way more important than memorizing facts that will mostly be forgotten or no longer relevant.
dlk
(12,468 posts)Cursive writing has been demonstrated to be good for the brain. This is a positive step for students.
doc03
(36,964 posts)read either, just give them audio books?
BigmanPigman
(52,357 posts)I remember when this debate was going on in my district. My mentor teacher said, "How will they be able to read a letter from their grandmom?". I taught 6th grade and the students had to write in cursive and they actually liked it better than printing. When I taught 1st I had to teach regular printing but the class always pleaded with me to teach them cursive. They thought it looked cooler than printing.
When high school helpers came to my class for 6 weeks. Their printing was strange and I could barely read it and my students couldn't read the comments on graded homework by the high school students.
The past 20 years has produced a style of writing that is neither traditional printing nor cursive. It is a hybrid style that almost looks like graphite. It looks like Greek to me.
mopinko
(71,969 posts)count me as not caring about cursive. when i homeschooled that was 1 subject i could.not.make.them care about.
Voltaire2
(14,879 posts)cbabe
(4,314 posts)The Great Cursive Writing Debate | NEA
Feb 4, 2022Cursive is more than just a way to write. It strengthens the cross hemi-sphere connections in the brain. Helps students later with problem solving and abstract thinking. As a math teacher I think students should learn cursive to help their brains develop those connections needed later in life.
https://www.labroots.com trending neuroscience 8151 cursive-writing-brain
Is Cursive Writing Good for the Brain? | Neuroscience
Karin Harman James of the Indiana University Department of Psychology and Brain Sciences found that cursive writing prepares students' brains for reading and enhances their writing fluency and composition." Leising also points to the College Board, the company who produces and administers the SATs as a supporter of cursive writing.
(Lots more online)