"Have you ever wondered why they don't teach kids to write in cursive anymore?"
And no, it's not a coincidence that they tend to use it less and less.
Writing in cursive means translating thoughts into words; it forces you not to take your hand off the paper.
A thought-stimulating effort, that allows you to associate ideas, tie them and put them into relation.
Not by any chance the word cursive comes from the Latin «currere», which runs, which flows, because the thought is winged, runs, flies.
Of course cursive has no place in today's world, a world that does its best to slow down the development of thought, to stuff it.
Think that cursive was born in Italy and then spread all over the world.
Why ?
Because it was compact, elegant, clear writing. Because it connects neural pathways that are only
connected in this way. And because AI cannot read it." -Susan Ottesen
https://m.primal.net/IqVF.jpg
AI can't read my cursive because I can barely read my cursive. Checkmate globalists 🔥
Learn cursive, maintain your privacy 😂
Don’t you take your hand off the paper between words? Haha
This sounds good but I’m not sure it’s true.
I’m sure it’s not. I can’t craft a letter in cursive that way; a click in my wrist renders it painful to try to do so.
Pretty sure cursive has been developed independently multiple times. I know Chinese has it's own version of cursive. And it's much harder to learn given that there is so many characters.
I think they are correctly noticing that typing is a better skill.
People don't use cursive anymore because handwriting isn't used as much anymore.
I would prefer that time be spent teaching typing and move cursive to optional calligraphy classes.
Where a student could pick between learning cursive or a foreign language.
There are people still typing with only two fingers.