© 2024 NPR Illinois
The Capital's Community & News Service
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Dusty Rhodes headshot
Education Desk
The Education Desk is our education blog focusing on key areas of news coverage important to the state and its improvement. Evidence of public policy performance and impact will be reported and analyzed. We encourage you to engage in commenting and discussing the coverage of education from pre-natal to Higher Ed.Dusty Rhodes curates this blog that will provide follow-up to full-length stories, links to other reports of interest, statistics, and conversations with you about the issues and stories.About - Additional Education Coverage00000179-2419-d250-a579-e41d385d0000

Are Computer Keyboards Killing Cursive?

The Papers Of Abraham Lincoln

With the rise of computers and electronic communications, educators have all but written off penmanship. And kids who don’t learn to write cursive tend to have trouble reading cursive. 

Last week, I went around torturing teenagers. I handed them a copy of a letter, written on stationery from the Executive Mansion and dated April 5, 1864. The letter is addressed to Mrs. Horace Mann.

It was especially challenging for 18-year-old Edwin Robles. 

“I’m sorry, I’m really bad at cursive. Like horrible at it," Robles said. "Why? Is this like a test?”

Well, just a fun test. Serious tests – like most school work these days – no longer require cursive. Timothy Shanahan, a professor emeritus from the University of Illinois in Chicago and an expert in literacy curriculum, says his students typically don’t use cursive for note-taking or anything else.

“In fact, the last few years, at the university, even exams tend to be done on computers rather than longhand,” he said.

But Shanahan said it’s vital for elementary students to have a handy way to write down their thoughts, and unless we arm every first grader with an iPad, cursive remains a useful skill.

“There are some studies that show that young children who are able to get words on paper easily become the better writers, which certainly makes a lot of sense,” Shanahan said.

Valerie Hotchkiss is upset about the disappearance of cursive instruction for a different reason: As the director of the Rare Book and Manuscript Library at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign, she’s witnessing a new generation of students who never learned cursive and therefore cannot decipher the precious documents in her care, such as the personal papers of Carl Sandburg, William Maxwell, Gwendolyn Brooks, and the father of science fiction, H.G. Wells, who wrote in what Hotchkiss calls “a cramped little style.”

“It’s clear enough once you get going with it, but … you need to know a little bit about cursive, you need to have practiced reading and writing it, in order to puzzle out a few of his idiosyncrasies and then begin to read it,” she said.

Three of kids I approached with the one-page letter – Joele Sydes, Leah Young, and Anja Copony – struggled through to the end, though none got enough words right to understand that the petition had asked the president if he "would free all slave children."

Robles looked at the word "would" and took his best guess. "I don’t know... like a 'wonder'? I don’t know. Is this ... I can’t. I can’t read it. Few all plan children? Wait, is that plan?" (It was the word slave.)

I let Robles skip to the end.

“Yours truly, Abraham Lincoln. Really?" he asked.  "Yeah, well he needs to work on his handwriting.”

Since the new Common Core curriculum doesn’t include instruction in longhand script, the handwriting is on the wall: Cursive is in danger of disappearing.

You can try reading the president’s penmanship for yourself with this document, courtesy of The Papers of Abraham Lincoln

After a long career in newspapers (Dallas Observer, The Dallas Morning News, Anchorage Daily News, Illinois Times), Dusty returned to school to get a master's degree in multimedia journalism. She began work as Education Desk reporter at NPR Illinois in September 2014.
Related Stories