Lindsey Fleck |
Today, I think penmanship has become one of the more
underappreciated skills. A lot of this has to do with the education leaders coming
out in support of nixing cursive from the curriculum, in favor of providing
children with the time to learn how to type quickly. Personally, I think moving
away from penmanship will have a negative impact on the students. Research has
proven that improved handwriting benefits cognitive development and motor
skills. Longhand can also provide people with a symbol for their personality.
Granted, you could spend your time going through the various fonts in Word to
give you different effects, but it doesn’t come from you.
One of the biggest reasons to keep your penmanship nice and
neat is that the world is, in many ways, still based on first impressions. When
you have to fill out a resume by hand and your handwriting is barely legible,
the recruiter will most likely be unimpressed. Furthermore, if you have to sign
your name somewhere and you print your name rather than write it in cursive,
your odds aren’t looking any better. If you leave a list for someone to do and
your handwriting is so bad that the person can hardly make out what you have
instructed, you can’t be upset if they do a task wrong because they couldn’t
make out the requests. And not long ago, CNN reported on a study that showed physician
penmanship errors had caused more than 7,000 deaths.
Loving to type is not a crime, but there are still times in
the world where you have to write long-handed. It’s important to make sure that
when you do, you are writing well. Taking the time to make a list on paper
every now and then can give you enough practice that you don’t have to worry about
turning into a person whose penmanship mirrors that of a toddler’s scribbles.
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