Cursive First
Cursive First
The reason for teaching ball-and-stick first, we are told, is because first graders do not
have the motor skills or muscular dexterity in their fingers to be able to write cursive at
that age. But that argument is totally false. Prior to the 1940s virtually all children in public and private schools were taught cursive in the first grade and virtually all learned to
write very nicely. All were trained in penmanship and did the various exercises - the
ovals, the rainbows, the ups and downs - that helped us develop good handwriting. We
were also taught how to hold the writing instrument (or stylus) correctly, cradled between
the thumb and the forefinger (also known as the index finger) with the tip of the writing
instrument resting on the long finger next to the forefinger, in a very relaxed position,
enabling a writer to write for hours without tiring.
On the other hand, when a child is taught to print first, the writing instrument is held
straight up with three or four fingers in a tight grip with much pressure being exerted
downward on the paper placed in a straight position. When these children are then taught
cursive in the second or third grade, they do not change the way they hold the writing instrument because a motor or muscular habit has been established that is not easy to alter.
That is why so many children develop poor cursive scripts because of the way they hold
their pens. Children do not easily unlearn bad habits. Which is why I tell parents that
there are two very important no-nos in primary education: do not teach anything that
later has to be unlearned, and do not let a child develop a bad habit. Instruct the child to
do it right from the beginning.
How Cursive Helps Reading
A question most often asked by parents when I assert that cursive should be taught
first is: wont learning cursive interfere with learning to read printed words? The answer
is: not at all. All of us who learned cursive first had no problem learning to read print. In
fact it helped us. How? Well, one of the biggest problems children have when learning to
read primary-school print and write in ball-and-stick is that so many letters look alike such as bs and ds; fs and ts; gs, qs, and ps - that children become confused and
make many unnecessary reading errors. In cursive, however, there is a big difference between a b and. a d. In cursive writing, a b starts like an l while a d begins like writing the
letter a. In other words, in cursive, children do not confuse bs and ds, because the
movements of the hand make it impossible to confuse the two letters. And this knowledge acquired by the hand is transferred to the reading process. Thus, learning to write
cursive helps learning to read print.
Another aid to reading is that cursive requires children to write from left to right so
that the letters will join with one another in proper sequence. The blending of the sounds
is made more apparent by the joining of the letters. In ball-and-stick, some children write
the letters backwards, and often the spacing is so erratic that you cant tell where one
word ends and another begins. Cursive teaches spatial discipline.
Another important benefit of cursive is that it helps the child learn to spell correctly
since the hand acquires knowledge of spelling patterns through hand movements that are
used again, and again in spelling. This is the same phenomenon that occurs when pianists
or typists learn patterns of hand movements through continued repetition.
Another question often asked by mothers of six-year-olds is what will their children
do when asked on a job application to please print. My answer is that I dont advocate
not teaching a child to print, I simply say teach cursive first, print later. Besides, that
child will have plenty of time to learn to print between the first grade and applying for a
job as a teenager.
The Ease of Cursive
I am often asked: Isnt cursive harder to learn than print? No. Its just the opposite.
It is difficult, if not unnatural, for children to draw straight lines and perfect circles,
which is required in ball-and-stick, when they would much rather be doing curves and
curls. In fact, all of cursive consists of only three movements: the undercurve, the overcurve, and the up and down. Thats all there is to it.
Another important point is that it takes time and supervision to help a child develop a
good cursive script, and one has that time in the first grade, not the third grade. The firstgrade child may start out writing in a large scrawl, but in only a matter of weeks, that
scrawl will be controlled by those little fingers into a very nice manageable script. Practice makes perfect, and children should be given practice in writing cursive.
If youve wondered why your grandparents usually have better handwriting than you
do; well now, you know the answer. If you teach cursive first, you can always develop a
good print style later. But if you teach print first, you may never develop a good cursive
style. Thus it is absolutely essential to teach cursive first.
Also, by concentrating on the development of a good cursive handwriting, you eliminate the nonsense of first starting with ball-and-stick, then moving to slant ball-and-stick,
or some other transitional script, finally ending up with cursive. Children will only make
the effort to learn one primary way of writing which they will use for the rest of their
lives. They don't need to be taught three ways, two of which will be discarded.
Incidentally, I have no objection to children drawing letters on their own when learning the alphabet. But once they start learning to read, formal instruction in cursive should
begin.
Cursive Helps the Left-Handed
Also, it may surprise the reader to learn that left-handed children gain special benefits
from learning cursive first. When left handed children are taught ball-and-stick first, their
tendency is to use the hook position in writing since the stylus is held straight up and the
paper is also positioned straight. This means that, as the child proceeds, printing from left
to right, the childs arm will cover what has already been written. This can be avoided if
the left-handed child learns to write from the bottom up, the way right-handed children
write. But this is difficult, if not impossible, to do when printing ball-and-stick.
However, if a left-handed child is taught to write cursive first, he or she must then turn
the paper clockwise and must write from the bottom up, since it is impossible to use the
hook position if the paper is turned clockwise. Right-handers, of course, turn the paper
counter-clockwise. But left-handers are quite capable of developing as good a cursive
handwriting as any right-hander by writing from the bottom up. (In fact, the secret of
good handwriting may be in the position of the paper.)
All of this must lead to one simple conclusion: teach cursive first and print later, There
are few things that help enhance a child's academic self-esteem more than the development of good handwriting. It helps reading, it helps spelling, and because writing is made
easy, accurate, and esthetically pleasant, it helps thinking.
As Francis Bacon once said: Reading maketh a full man. . . and writing an exact
man.
This article is from The Blumenfeld Education Letter, Vol. 9, No. 9 (Letter #97), September 1994. Editor: Samuel L. Blumenfeld.
Addendum A
Should people with dysgraphia use cursive writing instead of printing?
For many children with dysgraphia, cursive writing has several advantages. It eliminates the necessity of picking up a pencil and deciding where to replace it after each letter. Each letter starts on the line, thus eliminating another potentially confusing decision
for the writer. Cursive also has very few reversible letters, a typical source of trouble for
people with dysgraphia. It eliminates word-spacing problems and gives words a flow and
rhythm that enhances learning. For children who find it difficult to remember the motor
patterns of letter forms, starting with cursive eliminates the traumatic transition from
manuscript to cursive writing. Writers in cursive also have more opportunity to distinguish b, d, p, and q because the cursive letter formations for writing each of these letters
is so different. (Excerpt from an article on handwriting problems on The International
Dyslexia Association web site, www.interdys.org. The fact sheet is by Diana Hanbury
King and is the summary of work by Ruthmary Deuel, M.D., Betty Sheffield, and Diana
Hanbury King.)
ADDENDUM B
From Teaching Language-Deficient Children:
Theory and Application of the Association Method for Multisensory Teaching
by N. Etoile Dubard and Maureen K. Martin
Educators Publishing Service,
Cambridge, Ma. 1994, pp. 47f
Cursive Script
Another distinctive feature is the use of cursive writing from the beginning level and
throughout the entire program (McGinnis 1963). The rationale for using cursive writing
is that it gives the child a way of knowing that the letters for which he/she learned speech
production can be arranged to become a word representing a thing. Manuscript does not
offer such a means of informing the child that certain parts form a whole. The normal
childs central nervous system adequately processes information so that this awareness
exists. In aphasic and other children with language learning disabilities, the processing is
not adequate to the task. Almost all of the professional literature related to children with
learning difficulties indicates there are common reversals, inversions, and confusions regarding such written patterns as b/d, d./g, m/w, and saw/was, etc. While cursive script
may not eliminate all difficulties, it helps reduce them. The fact that some schools for the
deaf have employed cursive writing from the beginning of the instructional program indicates that the merits of cursive writing over manuscript have been recognized.
Heyman (1977) promoted cursive writing in this way:
Mastering cursive writing has many benefits for special children. It permits the
child to see each word as an integral unit, helps solve spatial problems for students who run all words together, and eliminates serious letter reversal . . . . He
learns immediately that in cursive writing letters are not isolated, but are always
connected to form words. (106)
Stasio (1976) reported these results from a study on severely and profoundly retarded
children:
1. Children functioning at a severely and profoundly retarded level could use cursive
letters more effectively than they could manuscript.
2. When using cursive letters, fewer errors were made in right-to-left direction than
with printed letters.
3. There were fewer errors made in letter reversal among cursive letters than with
printed ones. (55)
ADDENDUM C
What is it about Cursive?
by Randy Nelson of Peterson Directed Handwriting
If you are 7 or 8 years old you are probably experimenting with cursive handwriting.
Most second graders would gladly give their bubble gum to a big kid who would show
them how to do it. What is it about cursive that is so compelling for children? Why does a
toddler, still shaky with walking, insist on crawling up the stairs?
The two questions really are related. Cursive handwriting offers the same irresistible
challenge to a grade school child as the stairs offer to our crawler.
Actually, the challenge of cursive writing continues to entice people well beyond those
early years. And, that motor-learning challenge is probably the most important reason
FLUENT cursive handwriting should be an important objective in our grade schools. The
brain responds to the movement challenge by changing the way it is processing the symbols. When FLUENCY is not an objective for the instruction the important challenge is
lost.
Are school policy makers right? Are handwriting lessons no longer deserving of priority
in the school curriculum? That opinion prevails because so many teachers, particularly at
intermediate levels, say time spent on handwriting makes no visible difference on student
homework papers and book reports. But, policy makers fail to ask if that observation is
the result of teaching methods prescribed in a handwriting program.
Handwriting instruction was relegated to the curriculum closet because major publishing
companies offering handwriting programs on which teachers depend, eliminated fluency
as an objective. Those publishers put forth a multitude of programs based upon a strategy
that has been failing consistently for decades. Trace & Copy activities on the pages of a
workbook do not include a challenge to move fluently. The programs rarely refer to fluency or explain how a teacher could measure it. They do not suggest that fluency, the desired end result of instruction, should be measured and tracked as evidence of learning.
At some point each parent and teacher will need to decide on a course of action. Our students are expected to be able to use handwriting every day. Here is some food for thought
from someone who has spent over twenty years as a handwriting specialist while doing
research on teaching techniques for handwriting skills.
Cursive handwriting offers huge advantages over print writing for practical communication. However, this is only true when a person has learned the skills necessary to use it
easily. This means it is more accurate to say that it should offer great advantages. It fits
the way our muscles work for fluent handwriting and fluency should be the real objective, no matter what the style of letterform.
A Bit of History
When the tools for writing were pointed nibs affixed to the end of sticks or feathers cut to
become quill pens, the cursive advantage was actually a necessity. These tools readily
produced blotches instead of strokes when a little downward pressure was applied. Cursive shapes were produced by sliding the pen sideways. Our cursive alphabets were an
ingenious design allowing us to take advantage of the tools of the time. Without them our
Nations effort to educate the masses might well have failed.
However, each student had to develop a certain degree of physical skill to use the tools
with any success. The invention of the pencil changed things dramatically. Inkwells, blotters and nib pens disappeared and the effort for physical skill development was pretty
much forgotten as teachers discovered that the pencil allowed kids to function with little
physical training. The advantage of the fluency challenge slipped away, along with the
physical skill needed for fluency, as the penmanship effort was slowly eliminated from
the school curriculum.
The print alphabets were introduced in our schools after the pencil was available. At the
time, it was decided that the shapes of print letters, very much like those blocks of type
used by printers, offered an advantage for learning to read. There was no clear consensus
and the print/cursive argument lasted for many years. Eventually, more schools had
adopted the print alphabet for introducing symbolic language.
Children seemed to have no trouble learning to draw print letters with the pencil, a task
that would have been impossible with a nib pen. All of the movements used were downward - a direct route to blotch city. And, children could draw legible letters with little
need for good position skills that are very important for fluency. Because fluency was no
longer an objective, education never saw the debilitating effects caused by the lack of
physical skill instruction.
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There is surprising evidence indicating that the motor challenge presented by learning a
joined handwriting process, actually helps the brain learn how to get its various structures
to work together more efficiently.
Another simple advantage also makes sense. Six controlled movements in different directions are required to produce legible lowercase print forms. The lowercase cursive alphabet is produced with just three movements. Wouldnt you think that three would be easier
to control than six?
There is one fact that educators and parents should recognize. A child who learns how to
use the internal control system effectively will have a powerful advantage when it comes
to using our symbolic language as a tool for learning. The right kind of handwriting lesson offers the kind of motor-learning activity that stimulates the brain to build pathways
for better reading, writing and yes, even keyboarding.
Fluency is the real need. When choosing materials for teaching, look at the process. How
does the program help you to teach fluency? If lessons consist of trace and copy on student pages, fluency is not addressed.
If your child is not reading as well as you would like, teach fluency using handwriting
lessons designed for that goal. You will be surprised how easy it is. Contact the author
toll free at: 1-800-541-6328, or by email to <[email protected]>.
References:
(From Endangered Minds) Dr. Jerre Levy to Dr. Healy: I suspect that the normal human brains are
built to be challenged and it is only in the face of an adequate challenge that normal bihemispheric brain
operations are engaged. Dr. Levy goes on to say: ...children need a linguistic (auditory) environment
that is coordinated with the visual environment they are experiencing.
Babcock, M. K., & Freyd, J. J. (1988) Perception of dynamic information in static handwritten forms.
American Journal of Psychology, Spring, Vol 101, pp. 111-130.
Shadmir, R. and Holcomb, H. (1997) Neural Correlates of Motor Memory Consolidation Science Magazine, Vol. 277, 8 Aug. 1997.
Teulings, H. L., Arizona State University. Unpublished, proprietary, Ballistic Handwriting.
Find much more information, at www.peterson-handwriting.com.
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ADDENDUM D
Manuscript Versus Cursive Handwriting
Most children first learn to print, and only at age seven or eight are they introduced to
cursive script. Considering how infrequently students actually write, the neurological encoding of the writing task is undoubtedly fragile, subject to breakdown or significant loss.
We may predict, therefore, that some college writers will have regressed to an earlier
stage of writing production, a stage characterized by exclusive or primary use of printed
letters. Other, more capable writers will use only cursive because it allows them to generate ideas more quickly in written forms. Still other students will switch between these
forms of handwriting, perhaps to adjust speed of text production or merely as an uncontrolled means of generating text.
My prediction about the use of manuscript or cursive establishes that speed of text production would match writing ability: the faster a student writes, the more likely it is that
the student writes well. In other words, the less capable writers will favor manuscript for
its relatively low speed of production. In neurological terms, their prose is interrupted by
the time it takes to lift a pen from the page, whereas in cursive the tracing of letters is
more continuous. The variable pace of text production determines the writers congruence with the relatively fast speed of ideation, a speed that normally adjusts to the quick
production of speech. The use of manuscript or the incompetent use of cursive becomes a
serious disadvantage for the less capable writer, who not only struggles to generate written form but must also compensate for differences in fast ideation speed versus slow production speed. (62)
From Physical Eloquence and the Biology of Writing (1990) by Robert Ochsner.
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The loss of handwriting also may be a cognitive opportunity missed. The neurological
process that directs thought, through fingers, into written symbols is a highly sophisticated one. Several academic studies have found that good handwriting skills at a young
age can help children express their thoughts better a lifelong benefit. Children who
dont learn correct technique find it harder to write by hand, so they avoid it. Schools that
do teach handwriting often stop after third grade right after kids learn cursive. By the
time computers are more widely used in classrooms for writing, perhaps in fourth or fifth
grade, many children already have decided they don't like to write.
In one of the studies, Vanderbilt University professor Steve Graham, who studies the acquisition of writing, experimented with a group of first-graders in Prince Georges
County who could write only 10 to 12 letters per minute. The kids were given 15 minutes
of handwriting instruction three times a week. After nine weeks, they had doubled their
writing speed and their expressed thoughts were more complex. He also found corresponding increases in their sentence construction skills.
But Graham worries that students who remain printers, rather than writing in cursive,
need more time to take notes or write essays for the SAT. Teachers may say they dont
deduct for bad handwriting in class, but research tells another story, he said.
When adults are given the same composition written in good handwriting and poor
handwriting, they still give lower grades for ideation and quality of writing if the text is
less legible, he said.
Indeed, the SAT essays written in cursive had slightly higher average scores than those
written in print, according to the College Board.
Article accessed on November 19, 2011 at:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wpdyn/content/article/2006/10/10/AR2006101001475.html
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Revised 8/25/2011.
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Handwriting: A Neglected
Cornerstone of Literacy
[My comments are in brackets. Don Potter, 3/4/12]
This paper discusses the necessity for teaching children to have readable automatic
handwriting. It is argued here that automatic legible writing is an essential basis for
written expression.
THREE REASONS HANDWRITING MUST BE CAREFULLY TAUGHT TO ALL CHILDREN:
1. Handwriting allows access to kinesthetic memory, our earliest, strongest, and
most reliable memory channel.
2. Serviceable handwriting needs to be at a spontaneous level so that a student is free
to concentrate on spelling, and to focus on higher-level thought and written expressing.
3. Teachers judge and grade students based on appearance of their work, and the
world judges adults on the quality of their handwriting.
LACK OF PREPARATION OF TEACHERS
Phelps and Stemple believe that many teachers in the early grade pay little attention to
handwriting because they themselves have been given little training in methods of teaching it. The curricula in our schools are so packed with requirements that it is often difficult to include the basics. Although the time required for teaching handwriting is not so
great, it has to be incorporated regularly into a class schedule. Novice teachers, if they
teach the mechanics of writing at all, are often thrown upon the resource of using publishers copybooks. They expect children to copy, self-teach, and internalize the material.
And yet, without direct teaching, the attempt to learn writing often ends in disaster. Any
1st grade child can find and lock onto endless ineffective ways of scribbling around the
same letter. Many cases of apparent dysgraphia are the result of inadequate teaching. [All
the students coming to me for tutoring have received inadequate instruction in handwriting. I simply ask them to write the alphabet from a to z as fast as they can. Many third
graders can barely manage 20 to 30 letters per minute! They have poor letter strokes and
low legibility. I NEVER use copybooks to teach handwriting. I teach each cursive stroke
directly from the chalkboard, and then show how to form and connect the letters. Fortunately, I was taught cursive-first in first-grade back in Indiana in 1953 by a highly trained
and competent teacher, who was still teaching cursive-first! I simply taught what I was
taught. Most students and teachers today are not so fortunate. I am also fortunate to teach
at an elementary school that teaches fluent-cursive first from kindergarten up.]
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BENEFITS
AND
DRAWBACKS
OF
USING MANUSCRIPT
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