News

A 77-year-old who won an award for penmanship offers a compromise: Old folks teach kids how to write in cursive, and kids teach old folks how to use smartphones.
Studies find many elementary school teachers have had little-to-no preparation in how to effectively teach handwriting, and a University of Iowa special education professor has developed […] ...
A bill is headed to the governor's desk that would require all Oklahoma public and charter schools to teach cursive writing to students in third through fifth grades. Right now, some schools teach ...
If you have a child in the Philadelphia School District, chances are they have not been taught how to read or write cursive either.
If passed, the law would require that school districts teach cursive writing starting in the second grade and continuing each grade through the fifth grade. Schools would have to “ensure that students ...
Michigan's education department, under a new bill, may create a program for cursive writing to be taught in schools.
Schools would be required to teach students more cursive handwriting skills after the Assembly passed AB446. Bill now goes to California governor.
A state lawmaker from Pontiac wants to encourage more school districts to teach cursive writing. After State Representative Brenda Carter’s son passed away in 2019, she found a letter he wrote ...
Failing to teach cursive handwriting can decrease not just kids' interest but also their success in pursuing a career in the trades.
Since when does it take a law by government to teach “cursive,” or what we called “writing,” in our schools? And by what law did it stop being taught?
The St. Louis Pen Show runs from Thursday, June 22, to Sunday, June 25, at the Sheraton Westport Chalet Hotel in St. Louis County.