USA TODAY US Edition

Bill would make cursive mandatory

- Jack Mcloone

ASBURY PARK, N.J. – Between mandatory lessons being dropped from the Common Core in 2010 and the continued advancemen­t of technology making even a vague scrawl for credit cards rarer and rarer, cursive in our day-to-day lives is dying.

But a bill proposed by Assemblywo­man Angela McKnight, D-Hudson, is hoping to guarantee students still learn how to write and read in cursive by requiring that schools add cursive (back) to the elementary school curriculum. And she has now received an influentia­l vote of confidence: State Assembly Speaker Craig Coughlin, DMiddlesex.

Friday morning, on his monthly radio show, “Speak to the Speaker” on WTCTAM, he called the proposed bill a “great idea.”

The bill, A6010, introduced on Nov. 26, has yet to be scheduled for a vote but would be fast-acting: It would go into effect the following school year, as currently written. While some school districts, such as Coughlin’s hometown of Woodbridge, still teach cursive, it would make it mandatory.

Coughlin supported the bill saying, “You may not have your computer with you, or your phone dies. Now you can write in cursive.”

According to a statement from McKnight, there is research that supports that learning cursive can help children across the board with their “cognitive, motor and literacy skills, and may help students with learning disabiliti­es like dyslexia read and write with greater ease.”

She calling it “a vital skill (children) will need for the rest of their lives.”

 ?? PLUMSTED SCHOOL DISTRICT ?? Third graders learn cursive.
PLUMSTED SCHOOL DISTRICT Third graders learn cursive.

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