Culture

Cursive Is Back, Baby (Whether We Like It or Not)



Breaking news from the Garden State. New Jersey is bringing cursive handwriting back to elementary schools. Third through fifth graders will once again loop, swirl, and dramatically cross their t’s like it’s 1897 and the fountain pen lobby finally got its way.

On one hand Gen Z famously cannot sign a check. Or read one. Or locate one. (Checks are basically museum artifacts now, kept next to fax machines and Blockbuster membership cards.) So yes, there is something charming even romantic about a generation learning to sign their name in something other than a fingerprint or a DocuSign box.

On the other hand that ship?
The cursive ship? It has sailed.
It has sunk. It is currently being studied by marine biologists alongside Atlantis.

Still, here we are. Cursive revival. Cue the violins.

The argument, as always, is about the brain. Cursive, they say, activates different neural pathways. It ignites something. Fine motor skills! Memory! Cognition! Perhaps even wisdom!

And listen, writing does slow us down. It forces thought. It asks for patience. There is something almost meditative about the act of forming letters that insist on being connected, like they refuse to exist alone.

But also are we sure we want to ignite more parts of the brain right now?

These kids already:

-Navigate algorithms
-Decode emojis
-Manage group chats with 37 people
-Live under constant digital surveillance
-Exist in a world that will absolutely expect them to be emotionally fluent, technologically agile, and globally aware

And now we’re like “Quick, grab a pencil. Let’s activate the hippocampus.”

Bold choice.


Are we hoping cursive will:

Make them calmer?
Make them smarter?
Make them more polite?
Make them write thank-you notes?

Because I hate to break it to us, but the most unhinged notes I’ve ever received were written in flawless cursive. Penmanship has never been a reliable predictor of emotional regulation.

Cursive didn’t save us.
Cursive didn’t stop fax machines.
Cursive didn’t prevent reply-all email disasters.

And yet, here we are, nostalgic for loops.

Let’s be honest. This isn’t really about children. This is about us. About adults standing in the rubble of modern life saying, “Surely this this elegant slant of an ‘f’ will bring order.”

Cursive feels like control. Like continuity. Like proof that not everything has changed beyond recognition.

It’s the educational equivalent of:

Vinyl records
Handwritten menus

“Back in my day…”

We are grieving something, and cursive is getting caught in the crossfire.


So,   here’s the thing (and I hate myself a little for this) there is something lovely about cursive.

It’s personal.
It’s imperfect.
It reveals mood.
It carries fingerprints of emotion.

Cursive says I took my time.
It says: I was here.
It says: This wasn’t copy-pasted.

In a world of swipes and taps, maybe there is value in insisting that some things require friction.


Maybe cursive won’t save us. But maybe it doesn’t have to. Maybe it’s not about checks or signatures or brain activation. Maybe it’s just about giving kids another way to express themselves in a world that often rushes them.

Or maybe it’s just another well-intentioned policy that will confuse parents, stress teachers, and result in exactly one beautifully written grocery list before everyone goes back to typing.

Either way, sharpen your pencils, New Jersey.

The loops are coming back.

4 replies »

  1. I think it’s a good thing.

    When I see how the current generations hold a writing implement, grasping it awkwardly and with little control, it is definitely a step back to carbon-tipped-stick-on-a-cave-wall.

    The current generations also spend much time pretending to be medieval sorcerers with agency and magic – HUGE waste of time. At least it’s sort of social, with fake other people. You can’t take over the real world if your brain snaps to a fake one with a soundtrack where you aren’t even yourself.

    The world NEEDS that energy, and it’s going to GAMES.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Oh Dear Lord “Cursive Writing” Somewhat
    Of An Ongoing Lifelong Nightmare for

    Individuals With Challenges
    Associated With ‘Dysgraphia’

    Hehe my Rote Memory Impeccable
    In Acing Multiple Choice Tests Usually

    At the Top of the Class All the Way Through
    Three College Degrees Dear Miriam Perhaps

    They Just Read Over my Chicken Scratch

    With A Pre-Conceived Notion

    i Might Be Practicing Writing

    Prescriptions for A Coming
    Profession of A Doctor Hehe

    Even With Mail-In Voting my
    Signature Has Been Challenged

    As Not Possibly the First Signature

    Provided Yet Key Every Signature is Different

    For the Challenge of Writing Cursive in Any way

    Shape

    or Fashion

    Yes Form
    for Real Yet

    With Every Functional
    Disability Humans Often
    Even Far Exceed Their Peers
    in Play Arounds and Work Arounds

    Novel
    That
    Allow
    one to
    Survive and
    Even Thrive Ahead

    True Not Speaking Until
    Age 4 Was Not my Only
    Challenge on the Autism
    Spectrum on the Bi-Polar
    Spectrum With ADHD too

    As True Dysgraphia is Often
    Associated With ADHD too

    Yet Hey if
    Doctor’s
    Can Get
    Away Now
    With Their
    Illegible Signatures
    on Their Scripts I’ll

    Just Use a Digital
    Keyboard and Sing
    A New Song oF mY SoUL
    to my Full HeART’S Desire No

    Longer Confused as a Grade
    School Child Only By The Chicken

    Scratch
    of my
    Right Hand

    AND

    A Best pART of
    A Public Dance All
    23,142 Miles Now in
    149 Months Every where i go
    Is it Requires No Words at All

    Unlike the Work and Play Arounds
    Now To Create 14.9 MiLLioN Words of
    Free Verse Poetry in the Same Span of Dates

    And While i Digress it’s Sort of Like Being Called
    Bird Legs in Middle School So Reed Thin and Now

    at Age 65 Just
    Warming Up
    at the Military
    Gym While It’s
    Freezing Outside

    Yep Leg Pressing
    1540 Pounds 12 Reps

    With my Arms Raised
    to ‘The Heavens’ Not
    Even Holding On to

    The Machine

    A Most Amazing Part
    of the Human Condition
    Is the Worst Struggles May

    Become Our
    Greatest Strengths
    Indeed Yet True for

    me at Least all i Mentioned
    Above is Nothing Nothing @ALL
    Without the Real Feelings And Senses

    oF LoVE iN Peace

    Within

    To Give to

    All Far Beyond
    All Dance and Song Alone

    Yet Perhaps Being in that DarK
    Place Another Functional Disability
    in An Assessed Worst Pain and Numb

    Shut-in my Bedroom 66 Months Wake
    To Sleep Where No Drug Would Give

    Relief Other Than A Shallow Small

    Gift of Sleep Where Dreams

    Provided an Only Escape

    If And When they
    Ever Came at all

    Is Just a Lesson
    to Marry The

    Night

    To Merry The Day

    Yet It’s Not Just that
    DarK Creates LiGHT

    Indeed for

    Real

    DarK iS LiGHT..:)

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Well this development warms my heart and gives me hope for the future. Cursive is a unique fine-motor activity that helps create orthographic representations in the brain in a way swiping, tapping and typing cannot. It’s also a solitary activity that can lead to concentration. Longhand writing can serve as a means to deeply thinking one’s own thoughts. It potentially affords one a great deal more privacy in thinking these thoughts. And it can be destroyed. Long live liberty & longhand!

    Like

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