Mercury (Hobart)

SLATES VERSUS SCREENS IS CHALK AND CHEESE

- SUSIE O’BRIEN

PRIMARY school kids should ditch digital and return to using chalk and slates, a leading educationa­l expert says.

Central Queensland University academic Dr Ragnar Purje said the old-school approach was “profoundly important” for developing the brain, fine and gross motor skills, and the intellectu­al ability to construct a story.

Dr Purje, who is also a primary school classroom teacher with 40 years’ experience, said writing on screens could not replace the complex skill of handwritin­g with chalk.

“Tapping, swiping a screen, or using the ‘pointing’ finger on a screen is not handwritin­g,” he said.

“The research dealing with handwritin­g and compositio­nal narrative writing developmen­t is unambiguou­s: handwritin­g and narrative writing is not only complex, it requires desire, discipline, dedication, determinat­ion, perseveran­ce and resilience.”

Dr Purje said using chalk encouraged a “tripod grip” with thumb and pointer finger, which helped shape neurologic­al, neuromuscu­lar, gross and fine motor skill pathways.

“Research has also linked poor hand-brain co-ordination with an inability to compose a well-structured and creative written narrative,” he said. “That’s because the student is only focusing on letter formation, they haven’t developed handwritin­g automatici­ty so they can instead develop the narrative.”

Dr Purje also highlighte­d the environmen­tal sustainabi­lity of chalk, and the frustratio­n of using the popular alternativ­e of whiteboard­s and markers.

“Chalk never dries out, you can write with it even as it breaks, and producing chalk does not use tonnes of plastics or megalitres of chemical liquids,” he said.

“Schools worldwide are spending billions on plastic whiteboard markers destined for landfill, and on technology like tablets that is obsolete in a few years.”.

While chalk and slate boards were not available in most Australian primary schools, Dr Purje said parents should encourage their children to practise writing with chalk in their preschool years.

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