The Scotsman

We mustn’t let essential skill of handwritin­g die out

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Welcome to the world of illiteracy. According to the new orthodoxy, it’s not for parents to teach children how to read and write – that’s the job of teachers, or for those who have not abandoned handwritin­g as old hat.

Time was when children went to school at the age of five able to read and write. What an unconscion­able burden this has now placed on parents, now deemed so ill-equipped for this task!

Already traditiona­l handwritin­g is as good as dead. Government ministers are now advising parents to forego passing on the skills of handwritin­g and instead are urging parents to promote digital exercise books – as per the Department for Education’s six approved smartphone/tablet apps via its Hungry Little Minds website – as if chronic addiction to mobile phones was not troubling enough.

Handwritin­g is an essential skill, required in everyday tasks from simple note-taking to the traditiona­l personal letter. When we write a note of condolence to a bereaved relative, or one of personal congratula­tion, or an expression of the heart to a loved one, who really thinks that a trite mobile phone message in 8pt sans serif Ariel really cuts it? Why bother to compose at all if you can download a standard pro forma love letter from an app?

Handwritin­g is a unique personal signature guide to our very soul, individual and unique to us. Care taken on a personal hand-written letter means so much more than a literal-splattered text message and fatuous sillyface meme. I was fortunate to be taught italic handwritin­g, encouraged by my parents and by a handbook of examples by the author Tom Gourdie. This book has been with me for decades, with its inspiring range of italic styles. It was reinforced by a painstakin­g teacher who made us do upstrokes and downstroke­s till we had mastered the discipline of clear and elegant writing – a habit that has lasted a lifetime.

No iphones, battery chargers, or anti-social texting with head bowed, and eye-strain. Just pen and paper – far cheaper and infinitely more flexible than a phone, universall­y available and practical for all manner of correspond­ence. And a source of pride when undertaken.

What is happening to us that we are dumbing down our children and stripping them of such a basic, practical and pleasure-giving life skill?

 ??  ?? 0 Children should not be robbed of such a practical and pleasure-giving life skill as handwritin­g
0 Children should not be robbed of such a practical and pleasure-giving life skill as handwritin­g

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