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Dictator Hussein Obama says writing English no longer a requirement in US skools

POSTED BY: PIRATENEWS
UPDATED: Thursday, July 14, 2011 08:27
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Tuesday, July 12, 2011 8:10 AM

PIRATENEWS

John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!




Indiana is the latest US state which will not require its schoolchildren to learn joined-up, or cursive, writing.

But students will have to learn basic typing skills, which education officials say are more useful in the modern employment world.

The move is part of the Common Core State Standards Initiative, which aims to ensure consistency in US education and makes no mention of handwriting.

But critics say writing well is a vital skill for life and builds character.

US schoolchildren currently learn to write with joined-up writing from about the age of eight.

But under the core standards - which were released in June 2010 and have been adopted by nearly all US states - there is no requirement for them to do so.

'Progressive'

Children from grade six upwards - about 11 years old - will, however, be expected to "demonstrate sufficient command of keyboarding skills to type a minimum of three pages in a single sitting".

Many schools have said there simply is not enough time in the term to teach children both.

Dr Scott Hamilton, an Indiana clinical psychologist, said the time children spend labouring over script could be better used.
Continue reading the main story

"How are they supposed to know how to sign their names?”
-Jerry Long Parent

"From an intuitive standpoint, this makes sense, based on the increasingly digital world into which this generation of children is growing up," he said.

Denna Renbarger, an education official in Lawrence Township, Indiana, said there were many more important things for students to be learning at school

"I think it's progressive of our state to be ahead on this," she told the Indianapolis Star.

Indiana officials have stressed that the standards are not exhaustive and that teachers could continue teaching handwriting if they chose.

But some parents, teachers and psychologists have reacted angrily to the move, saying there is more to handwriting than being able to write quickly.

"The fluidity of cursive allows for gains in spelling and a better tie to what they are reading and comprehending through stories and through literature," Paul Sullivan, head teacher of a school in California, told CNN.

"I think there's a firmer connection of wiring between the brain's processes of learning these skills and the actual practice of writing."

Parent Jerry Long told the Indianapolis Star he was worried about what the new system could mean for his sixth grade daughter in the future.

"I don't agree with it. How are they supposed to know how to sign their names?"

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-14121541










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Tuesday, July 12, 2011 9:27 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Liar. It's not about "writing English no longer a requirement in US skools", it's about CURSIVE, and you damned well know it. While personally I abhor the idea and was angry when I heard about it, since I love the act of writing, it's not "writing English" and it has NOTHING to do with Obama. Gawd, you're pathetic!





Hippie Operative Nikovich Nikita Nicovna Talibani,
Contracted Agent of Veritas Oilspillus, code name “Nike”,
signing off



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Tuesday, July 12, 2011 12:54 PM

BYTEMITE


I never use cursive anyway, even when in pen and paper mode. If someone is going to "write fast" they'll develop their OWN kind of cursive in the process, that's clearly where the modern form came from. Making this a regimented learning process is pointless, and doesn't keep anyone from writing, nor does it really slow anyone down.

Cursive is dumb, and is a waste of time. Dump it.

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Tuesday, July 12, 2011 1:46 PM

FREMDFIRMA


I fucking hate Cursive.

You have to understand, back in the 70's school systems were FAR less understanding of various neuro based problems, as I recall the "treatment" for Dyslexia was severely abusive, and so on.

And learning, decades later, by accident, that it wasn't just me, that the hell I suffered for this didn't have to happen, enraged me beyond all sense, resulting in the berserk destruction of most of my office and a drinking binge that ended in unconsciousness....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerstmann_syndrome

Never heard of it ?
Hell, neither did I, till the scan I had to sit through after that apparent mild stroke turned up anomolies related to it, and suddenly everything made sense.

Inability to perform higher math functions regardless of practice/education...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyscalculia
Ambidexterity and poor sense of direction (other cabbies called me "Wrongway" since I needed a compass).
And... Disgraphia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysgraphia

Bear in mind, back then, we were GRADED on handwriting quality, in cursive - and not performing up to spec resulted in a deluge of "writing assignments" (the very TERM causes me to wince, even now) of copying long strings of text, over and over and over...
Quote:

Motor dysgraphia is due to deficient fine motor skills, poor dexterity, poor muscle tone, or unspecified motor clumsiness. Motor dysgraphia may be part of the larger problem of motor apraxia. Generally, written work is poor to illegible, even if copied by sight from another document. Letter formation may be acceptable in very short samples of writing, but this requires extreme effort and an unreasonable amount of time to accomplish, and cannot be sustained for a significant length of time. Writing long passages is extremely painful and cannot be sustained. Letter shape and size becomes increasingly inconsistent and illegible. Writing is often slanted due to holding a pen or pencil incorrectly. Spelling skills are not impaired. Finger tapping speed results are below normal.

Of course, the pain, the suffering, was passed off as me lying, malingering, and just being lazy.
As were the math difficulties, but that for another day.
Quote:

Many people who are dysgraphic experience pain while writing. The pain usually starts in the center of the forearm and then spreads along the nervous system to the entire body. This pain can get worse or even appear when a dysgraphic is stressed. Few people who do not have dysgraphia know about this, because many with dysgraphia will not mention it to anyone. There are a few reasons why pain while writing is rarely mentioned:

Sufferers do not know that it is unusual to experience this type of pain with writing.
If they know that it is different from how others experience writing, they feel that few will believe them.
Those who do not believe that the pain while writing is real will often not understand it. It will usually be attributed to muscle ache or cramping, and it will often be considered only a minor inconvenience.


Minor inconvenience, yeah, when involuntary tears of pain stream down your face, and you're called a crybaby and a liar, and not only retaliated against for this inability by the teachers, said teachers encourage other kids to aggress against you as well...

You cannot *IMAGINE* the rage I felt upon learning this, the pure, bitter HATRED of them, their ignorance, their refusal to accept that there really was a problem there.
And folks wonder why I had such tremendous issues with authority as a kid, bah.

Hell, even now, with that most recent illness - all but one of the damn docs ignored everything I tried to tell em, which I expected, and plotted around, but that kinda hostility, and the root of it...
Lets just say I understand Lizbeth Salander better than any of you ever will.

Anyhows, I hate, hate, hated cursive, and I hated writing ANYTHING by hand, still do - I saved my pennies and bought a Dot Matrix Printer for my Tandy CoCo and used that, despite being docked a full grade on every assignment I used it for, or in one case, the summer school teacher assigned to me for Speech I - which I had to "make up" despite having NEVER failed a class in my life since they kept changing the credit requirements out from under me... flat would NOT accept printed-out work, which lead to the argument in the library where I verbally and utterly *BROKE* the lady, she made the mistake of giving *ME* the life-is-hard speech, little miss suburbanite from her goddamn gated community, so I let her HAVE it, steamrollered her totally and left her bawling her head off - to which she sniffled that I'd never darken the doorstep of her class again, and I told her to fucking DEAL with it, cause I'd be back tomorrow.
Which, I not only was, the class offered a standing ovation when I walked in, glared at her and sat down.
She told me not to bother doing any work (I did it anyway) completely refused to acknowlege my existence, and passed me with a C-, irrespective of anything I did from that point.

That was one of the many, MANY things which caused me to walk out and exploit various loopholes to get a GED at sixteen and bypass two more years of bullshit, especially since I would have had to fill out a *wince*... "writing assignment* in order to graduate normally, and the handwriting WOULD be graded, versus the GED being a multiple choice bubble-form at the time.

Ironically, I didn't dislike calligraphy when one teacher offered it in art class, and actually kind of enjoyed it when sensei pushed it on me as something a Bushi should know, although he found most of my haiku laughably awful (so bad it's good).
I think they should merge Cursive and Calligraphy into one form under Art, in order to preserve it, rather than discarding it entirely though.

FYI - I do hand-write the hourly reports, in a kind of scribble-shorthand folks only understand cause they already know what it says - anything more, like incident reports, is typed, printed and double-copied both for legal reasons and cause subjecting folks to my handwriting is kind of unfair to both ends of the deal.

Oh, and did I mention I really, REALLY HATE Cursive ?

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.

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Tuesday, July 12, 2011 2:12 PM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


The only thing I ever use cursive for is my signature, and once when I was trying to disguise my writing, the person figured it out anyways so it was silly. Want to know a secret? I don't know most of the capital letters in cursive.

I tend to think that cursive isn't the most important thing in the world for kids to learn, if they want to learn it its fine but I don't see it as something that is necessary, aside from writing your signature, which you can learn to do without learning the whole cursive alphabet. I love when its called joined up writing, I only first heard that term a few years ago and liked it because it was different.

And I agree with Niki, the title of this post is rediculous, I'd be okay with someone changing it for better clarity's sake, though I don't normally encourage that sort of thing.

Frem that sounds horrible, I'm sorry that school was made such a hideous place for you growing up. I feel its gotten better since you were a kid, though it isn't perfect of course..

What really irks me is that some of the classes in the suburb districts near me are using Ipods to do all their school work: Reading, maths, writing (?) all done on little ipods. I think that's rediculous and I'm glad they don't have my little brother doing that at his school, goodness knows the kid is too technologically dependent as it is, I don't want school adding to that problem. Technology is great for the most part, but our kids have such short attention spans now adays and I think it might be because they're glued to devices that are constantly moving along at super speed: computer and video games, not to mention that a lot of kids shows don't have much plot to them anymore. A lot of shows have two stories in a half hour instead of one. When I was a little girl I watched cartoons that had a real and complex plot on each episode. Of course there were things like Looney Tunes that had no plot and were short, but that wasn't the only choice and I could watch both.

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya

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Tuesday, July 12, 2011 3:44 PM

THEHAPPYTRADER


I hate cursive as well. I am dyslexic, and struggled with it and my teachers were unaware of it. My mother told me I was almost held back in 1st and 2nd grade. Fortunely, during my 3rd grade year a substitute teacher of all people immediately recognized what I was going through and was able to help me throw it, with interesting methods such as spraying shaving cream on the desk and having me practice my writing with my finger.

If it weren't for that teacher and the Young Jedi Knights books, I would have hated reading and writing. I wonder if I ever would have made it to college.

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Tuesday, July 12, 2011 6:19 PM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


I enjoy writing in cursive, but there are few who can read my writing when I do so. I tend to use more of a tight, almost architectural print style in most of my day-to-day writing. A few people have asked if I am an engineer or architect because of the way I print. But I find cursive faster and more convenient if I'm taking lecture notes.

But typing is even faster. :)

"Although it is not true that all conservatives are stupid people, it is true that most stupid people are conservatives." - John Stuart Mill

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Tuesday, July 12, 2011 6:41 PM

JAMERON4EVA


Quote:

Originally posted by Fremdfirma:
I fucking hate Cursive.

You have to understand, back in the 70's school systems were FAR less understanding of various neuro based problems, as I recall the "treatment" for Dyslexia was severely abusive, and so on.

And learning, decades later, by accident, that it wasn't just me, that the hell I suffered for this didn't have to happen, enraged me beyond all sense, resulting in the berserk destruction of most of my office and a drinking binge that ended in unconsciousness....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerstmann_syndrome

Never heard of it ?
Hell, neither did I, till the scan I had to sit through after that apparent mild stroke turned up anomolies related to it, and suddenly everything made sense.

Inability to perform higher math functions regardless of practice/education...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyscalculia
Ambidexterity and poor sense of direction (other cabbies called me "Wrongway" since I needed a compass).
And... Disgraphia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysgraphia

Bear in mind, back then, we were GRADED on handwriting quality, in cursive - and not performing up to spec resulted in a deluge of "writing assignments" (the very TERM causes me to wince, even now) of copying long strings of text, over and over and over...
Quote:

Motor dysgraphia is due to deficient fine motor skills, poor dexterity, poor muscle tone, or unspecified motor clumsiness. Motor dysgraphia may be part of the larger problem of motor apraxia. Generally, written work is poor to illegible, even if copied by sight from another document. Letter formation may be acceptable in very short samples of writing, but this requires extreme effort and an unreasonable amount of time to accomplish, and cannot be sustained for a significant length of time. Writing long passages is extremely painful and cannot be sustained. Letter shape and size becomes increasingly inconsistent and illegible. Writing is often slanted due to holding a pen or pencil incorrectly. Spelling skills are not impaired. Finger tapping speed results are below normal.

Of course, the pain, the suffering, was passed off as me lying, malingering, and just being lazy.
As were the math difficulties, but that for another day.
Quote:

Many people who are dysgraphic experience pain while writing. The pain usually starts in the center of the forearm and then spreads along the nervous system to the entire body. This pain can get worse or even appear when a dysgraphic is stressed. Few people who do not have dysgraphia know about this, because many with dysgraphia will not mention it to anyone. There are a few reasons why pain while writing is rarely mentioned:

Sufferers do not know that it is unusual to experience this type of pain with writing.
If they know that it is different from how others experience writing, they feel that few will believe them.
Those who do not believe that the pain while writing is real will often not understand it. It will usually be attributed to muscle ache or cramping, and it will often be considered only a minor inconvenience.


Minor inconvenience, yeah, when involuntary tears of pain stream down your face, and you're called a crybaby and a liar, and not only retaliated against for this inability by the teachers, said teachers encourage other kids to aggress against you as well...

You cannot *IMAGINE* the rage I felt upon learning this, the pure, bitter HATRED of them, their ignorance, their refusal to accept that there really was a problem there.
And folks wonder why I had such tremendous issues with authority as a kid, bah.

Hell, even now, with that most recent illness - all but one of the damn docs ignored everything I tried to tell em, which I expected, and plotted around, but that kinda hostility, and the root of it...
Lets just say I understand Lizbeth Salander better than any of you ever will.

Anyhows, I hate, hate, hated cursive, and I hated writing ANYTHING by hand, still do - I saved my pennies and bought a Dot Matrix Printer for my Tandy CoCo and used that, despite being docked a full grade on every assignment I used it for, or in one case, the summer school teacher assigned to me for Speech I - which I had to "make up" despite having NEVER failed a class in my life since they kept changing the credit requirements out from under me... flat would NOT accept printed-out work, which lead to the argument in the library where I verbally and utterly *BROKE* the lady, she made the mistake of giving *ME* the life-is-hard speech, little miss suburbanite from her goddamn gated community, so I let her HAVE it, steamrollered her totally and left her bawling her head off - to which she sniffled that I'd never darken the doorstep of her class again, and I told her to fucking DEAL with it, cause I'd be back tomorrow.
Which, I not only was, the class offered a standing ovation when I walked in, glared at her and sat down.
She told me not to bother doing any work (I did it anyway) completely refused to acknowlege my existence, and passed me with a C-, irrespective of anything I did from that point.

That was one of the many, MANY things which caused me to walk out and exploit various loopholes to get a GED at sixteen and bypass two more years of bullshit, especially since I would have had to fill out a *wince*... "writing assignment* in order to graduate normally, and the handwriting WOULD be graded, versus the GED being a multiple choice bubble-form at the time.

Ironically, I didn't dislike calligraphy when one teacher offered it in art class, and actually kind of enjoyed it when sensei pushed it on me as something a Bushi should know, although he found most of my haiku laughably awful (so bad it's good).
I think they should merge Cursive and Calligraphy into one form under Art, in order to preserve it, rather than discarding it entirely though.

FYI - I do hand-write the hourly reports, in a kind of scribble-shorthand folks only understand cause they already know what it says - anything more, like incident reports, is typed, printed and double-copied both for legal reasons and cause subjecting folks to my handwriting is kind of unfair to both ends of the deal.

Oh, and did I mention I really, REALLY HATE Cursive ?

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.





I hate cursive too, only use it for one thing, my signature, thas it. My senior year english teacher always wrote in cursive on the board i was like, "dude, no one understands your chicken scratch." I even tried to write in cursive on a test for my ROTC class, my teacher took one look and said, "_______(MY LAST NAME) you know dadgum well i dont understand this chicken scratch! Write neatly and legibly honey mkay?!" Lol, i almost decked my ENGLISH teacher, not rotc, but english. He was, como se de say an idiot. I mean he intentionally tried to fail one my friends, not ONCE took points of ANYONE else for "graphic images" and there were plenty before it, yet when she came up, he was like, "Um, i forgot to mention that umm....." and shit. Well, she did pass, and we both graduated, thank the maker. My biggest problem in school was add, and an irrational hate of listeing each individual section of a math problem. I can see the fucking answer accept it, and give me my A type thing ya know?

"Mom, he has her chip. He has her."
John Connor,"Born To Run", TSCC EP 2x22

"We mustn't over stimulate young minds. Das ist verboten!" - Rappy

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Wednesday, July 13, 2011 1:20 AM

DREAMTROVE


I have to assume Jerry Long Parent is an indian name ;)

That's what a ship is, you know - it's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails, that's what a ship needs.

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Wednesday, July 13, 2011 3:21 AM

PIRATENEWS

John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!


What a bunch of retards! You prefer speaking Spainish, Chinese, Porn? Since when is signing your name, or reading other peoples signatures on things like CHECKS and CONTRACTS, not important?

If you can't sign your name you can't sign a contract by yourself. You can't even get a driver license internal passport.
http://blog.123notary.com/?tag=signature-by-x

Just because some people cannot walk or run, walking and running should be banned in skools and in public?

What happens when a nation cannot read its own Constitution and Declartion of Independence? Besides the Commies celebrating May Day every day in USA.









The sheeple always get the govt police state they deserve.

Copkiller Hussein Obama sold 30,000 guns to Mexican narcoterrorists who can't write cursive English in false-flag Operation Fast & Furious
http://fireflyfans.net/mthread.asp?b=18&t=49022

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Wednesday, July 13, 2011 5:03 AM

BYTEMITE


Why the hell should we be signing contracts drafted up by some evil soul-sucking lawyer? Or joining a credit card company? Or putting our identification out there for the government to run through their facial profiling machines?

And if someone can't read letters just on a slant and vaguely connected, they're probably not too bright.

Cursive still sucks, and now I think it is a gateway drug to government and corporate abuse!

Thanks PN!

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Wednesday, July 13, 2011 5:11 AM

PIRATENEWS

John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:
Why the hell should we be signing contracts drafted up by some evil soul-sucking lawyer? Or joining a credit card company? Or putting our identification out there for the government to run through their facial profiling machines?

And if someone can't read letters just on a slant and vaguely connected, they're probably not too bright.

Cursive still sucks, and now I think it is a gateway drug to government and corporate abuse!

Thanks PN!



The same dummies who weren't taught to sign their own name also weren't taught to print "under protest" beside their signature to negate unconscionable govt contracts. Google UCC 1-207 and UCC 1-308.

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Wednesday, July 13, 2011 1:39 PM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:

Originally posted by piratenews:
What a bunch of retards! You prefer speaking Spainish, Chinese, Porn? Since when is signing your name, or reading other peoples signatures on things like CHECKS and CONTRACTS, not important?

Just because some people cannot walk or run, walking and running should be banned in skools and in public?

What happens when a nation cannot read its own Constitution and Declartion of Independence? Besides the Commies celebrating May Day every day in USA.




What happens? I guess people run the risk of becoming as stupid as you are. Scary thought, that. ;)


Now honestly, can you show me where anyone has BANNED cursive writing in any school? Not teaching it isn't the same as BANNING its use.

"Although it is not true that all conservatives are stupid people, it is true that most stupid people are conservatives." - John Stuart Mill

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Wednesday, July 13, 2011 2:04 PM

DREAMTROVE


I'm going to come out on the side of cursive. I practice it regularly, and use it for shorthand. It's probably the one thing taught in American schools that draws from the right side of the brain. The formations fascinated me, it was like meditation.

I see the same thing happening in China, an abandonment of calligraphy in favor of typing. Efficient, left brained, and machine dependent. Yes, it is important, but it's equally important to remember that we are not the extensions of machines.


Mike, thanks for pointing out to PN that he uses microsoft, since everything else has a spellcheck built in by now. ;) He might want to see to that, as it is a security risk.

ETA: I'm using a Mac, it does make that nice hybrid between linux and PC. Still, sometimes I use linux and am reminded of how much more efficient it is. Every once in a while I use microsoft, and am reminded of how much more efficient it isn't.

That's what a ship is, you know - it's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails, that's what a ship needs.

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Wednesday, July 13, 2011 2:11 PM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


But hell, even MicroSquash has a freaking spell-checker built into it these days!

Interesting take on the right-brain/left-brain thing. Hadn't considered that.

And yes, there is a certain grace - and a challenge - to writing cursive well.

It won't be a lost art, just a less-common one.

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Wednesday, July 13, 2011 2:15 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Who needs cursive, or writing when you can get your point across in photoshopped montages.

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Wednesday, July 13, 2011 5:38 PM

NEWOLDBROWNCOAT


Quote:

Originally posted by Fremdfirma:

I fucking hate Cursive.



Me too. It was the only subject I ever got a grade of less than a C in. Spent my entire school career listening to teachers complain that my cursive writing was unreadable.

When my daughter hit 8th grade and we had her tested for learning disabilities, they explained that cursive writing is a function of fine motor co-ordination development-- everybody develops it at different rates, and some people never develop it well. They specifically recommended that we buy a computer, and that all of her teachers allow her to word-process ALL of her homework. Which saved her and her sister, but was way too late for me.
Today I block print everything I expect anybody to read, and if I hurry, that's unreadable. Anything official for business, I word process and e-mail or print out in hard copy. The typewriter, and the word-processor, are the greatest inventions of modern society, on a personal communication level.

As to signitures, I'm planning to adopt a Chinese "chop"-- an ornate pictogram image, kinda like a rubber stamp. The more elegant ones are carved in ivory or stone. Probably not legally binding here in the USA, but usable day-to-day. A lot of the time, I just initial stuff anyway, usually in block letters.

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Wednesday, July 13, 2011 8:06 PM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


DT, that is an interesting perspective. Maybe they could teach it, but not put so much emphasis on it?

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya

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Thursday, July 14, 2011 8:01 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Oh, boy, am I gonna be piled on. I adore handwriting, but I came about it the hard way. I got chewed out by a teacher for my indecipherable handwriting, so went the other extreme and fashioned my own "style" of cursive...sometimes just as incomprehensible. Weirdly, I'm with PN and DT on this, for many of the same reasons. But I recognize my feelings are an outgrowth of my own enjoyment of the act of writing. I only have one remaining friend with whom I communicate via handwriting; that and my journal are the only handwriting I normally do. But I believe losing it (and trust me, it WILL be lost if children aren't taught it) will diminish us as a society.

I've also got a problem with
Quote:

goodness knows the kid is too technologically dependent as it is, I don't want school adding to that problem
There are too many devices used by kids nowadays, in my opinion, and as a result they don't learn basic math and spelling. That will also diminish us, in fact already IS.

While I don't consider it VITAL, or even as important as many other things, I'm sad to see the day come when they are deliberately removing handwriting from education.


Hippie Operative Nikovich Nikita Nicovna Talibani,
Contracted Agent of Veritas Oilspillus, code name “Nike”,
signing off



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Thursday, July 14, 2011 8:03 AM

FREMDFIRMA



Ah yes, NOBC, I know what they are.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seal_%28East_Asia%29
One of the reasons Yuriko was trying to get to the wreckage of her uncles office building was in hopes of recovering his personal seal, although upon seeing how totally pulverized the place was she knew it was pointless, alas.

I do have a seal-signature, as well as the legal name-sign, although the latter looks like a bad EEG more than anythin else, while the former is an intricate pictogram which is far harder to duplicate since it's use-specific.

Modern tech is kind of causing the practice to decline, given the ease of duplication, but I don't see why as it can just as easily duplicate signatures.

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.

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Thursday, July 14, 2011 8:27 AM

BYTEMITE


Or you could take art classes and learn instruments.

Like Frem, sometimes I practice calligraphy in my free time. STILL don't like cursive, because they way they teach it is too structured. Everyone's going to do their own thing anyway, so why not let them?

I also write in my free time. In a note book. Not a note book computer. Pen and paper. Losing cursive doesn't affect that. The arguments in favour are not sufficient to overcome my dislike.

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