Members Only Live Class Schedule

Here are the upcoming dates for the Silver/Gold membership tele-classes. This schedule will be updated with new tele-class dates.  Please confirm you are a paid “good status” member and join us this month live on the phone calls or via our live webcast stream.  Any questions about your membership status, call our customer support center or submit a customer support ticket via the help menu.

Remember, all tele-classes are saved and available up to 3 months to listen to any class you may have missed.

Gold & Silver Members, please log-in to view this content, or scroll down to see how you can attend.


Quick Links (click these links):

Live Class Schedule

Our new live classes are hosted by our Handwriting University President Bart Baggett as well as our Graduate, Allie Bradley. Bart hosts special event type classes where he covers specific topics regarding handwriting analysis such as relationships, criminal handwriting samples, etc. Allie Bradley is the host of our handwriting analysis tutoring class. In these tutoring classes you join in with a group and analyze handwriting samples together under the guidance of Allie. You can submit your own samples, or samples that you have come across. You can ask questions, this is a great time to get feedback and answers, so look below for the next upcoming class and join in!

Date Time
September 12th, 2011 Replay available (log-in first)
October 17th, 2011 Replay available (log-in first)
November 14th, 2011 Replay available (log-in first)
December 5th, 2011 Replay available (log-in first)
Italian Graphology Class
Replay now available (Log-in First)
Monday, January 9th, 2012 6:00 PM Pacific / 9PM Eastern
Monday, February 13th, 2012 6:00 PM Pacific / 9PM Eastern
Monday, March 12th, 2012 6:00 PM Pacific / 9PM Eastern
Monday, April 9th, 2012 6:00 PM Pacific / 9PM Eastern

How to Attend These Classes

Only Handwriting University members with Gold or Silver memberships are able to attend these live classes. Once classes are completed, they are available for download or stream in the members only live event area. So once you have a paid membership, not only will you be able to attend these classes, but you can also listen up to 3 months of previous classes.

 

Posted in Class Schedule, FAQ, Special Events and Live Classes, class, handwritinganalysis, live class, schedule, tele class, tele-classes, teleclass, tutor, tutoring | Comments Off

Level 201 Audio Trait Dictionary (Free Preview)

Main Index The Basic Trait Dictionary Online Training Lessons

This is a free preview of the 201 Audio Trait Dictionary, here are five samples of the dictionary. Enjoy.

Retail $197 On Sale now for just $47 for current members and owners of the Level 101 course.
(This sale will end when the first 100 students upgrade into this program. Your feedback is greatly appreciated.)

 

Here is the full list of traits that are covered in the Audio Trait Dictionary (Bonus Video denotes traits with videos)

  • AB slant (Bonus Video)
  • absentminded
  • acquisitiveness
  • aggressiveness
  • analytical thinker
  • argumentative
  • attentive to detail
  • BC slant (Bonus Video)
  • blind persistence (Bonus Video)
  • blunt / frankness (Bonus Video)
  • cautious
  • CD slant (Bonus Video)
  • comprehensive thinker
  • concentration
  • cumulative thinker
  • DE slant (Bonus Video)
  • defiance
  • deliberateness
  • desire for attention
  • desire for culture
  • desire for responsibility
  • desire to be different
  • determination
  • diplomacy
  • dominant
  • domineering
  • dreamer (Bonus Video)
  • dual personality (Bonus Video)
  • E + slant (Bonus Video)
  • enthusiasm (Bonus Video)
  • exaggeration
  • exclusiveness
  • FA slant (Bonus Video)
  • fear of intimacy
  • fear of success (Bonus Video)
  • fluidity of thought
  • generosity
  • guilt complex
  • high self-esteem (Bonus Video)
  • independent thinker (Bonus Video)
  • intentional deceit (Bonus Video)
  • investigative / exploratory
  • irritability
  • issues with the opposite gender (Bonus Video)
  • jealousy
  • lack of mental cultivation
  • loner (Bonus Video)
  • low self-esteem (Bonus Video)
  • loyalty
  • narrow minded (Bonus Video)
  • optimism
  • organizational ability
  • paranoia
  • pathological liar (Bonus Video)
  • perfectionist
  • persistence (Bonus Video)
  • philosophically closed
  • philosophically open
  • physical frustration
  • practical (Bonus Video)
  • pride & dignity (Bonus Video)
  • procrastination (Bonus Video)
  • resentment / anger
  • sarcasm (Bonus Video)
  • secretive (Bonus Video)
  • self-confidence / ego (Bonus Video)
  • self-conscious
  • self-control (Bonus Video)
  • self-critical (Bonus Video)
  • self-deceit (Bonus Video)
  • self-reliance / leadership
  • sense of humor
  • sensitive to criticism (Bonus Video)
  • sexual imagination
  • shallow thinker
  • strong physical drive
  • stubborn (Bonus Video)
  • surface thinker
  • talkative (Bonus Video)
  • teenage y
  • temper (Bonus Video)
  • too many irons in the fire
  • vanity
  • visionary / daydreamer
  • willpower
Posted in .Free Preview, handwritinganalysis | Comments Off

December Members Only Tutoring Class

This is a unique tele-class that we are hosting each month, on top of the normal tele-classes. This tele-class will be aimed more towards answering questions that you may have about handwriting analysis and to walk you through analyzing a handwriting sample. You can also bring up any questions you may have about our [...]
Posted in Special Events and Live Classes, handwritinganalysis | Comments Off

November 2011 Members Only Tutoring Class

This is a unique tele-class that we are hosting each month, on top of the normal tele-classes. This tele-class will be aimed more towards answering questions that you may have about handwriting analysis and to walk you through analyzing a handwriting sample. You can also bring up any questions you may have about our [...]
Posted in Special Events and Live Classes, handwritinganalysis | Comments Off

Ask Bart: What does spacing between letters really indicate?

——— Reader Question———

This question was submitted by Bruce Entwistle, of Belgium

Bruce wrote:
Thank you ever so much for your effort in helping me out with my previous question about a certain trait.
Ah, yes of course Bart nor you couldn’t recall this word cunning, but the word actually should
be curning not cunning , which is mentioned in the Hand analysis by Bart of
Paris Hilton: http://www.handwritinguniversity.com/news/paris_hilton/index.html

PDF word for word transcript and audio above.

And here is the example where I found it about Paris her handwriting which Bart was questioning a student :

Bart Baggett: The letters are crowded, that’s a good question. I don’t have an exact trait for you
about crowded letters.

Do you mean letters upon letters (touching).?

Student question: What would typically be called curning, and a lot of the letters are totally
touching.

Bart Baggett: Right, I have read that space between the letters means generosity, which she
doesn’t have, but I don’t know if the opposite’s true.

When I’ve seen fear of poverty, fear of being broke, it’s not been over-letters, it’s been compressed.
And her letters don’t look compressed…so this won’t apply.  Her letters are just overlapping.

I think it’s a lack of respect for space –
I think the overage is is just kind of no appreciation for her own or other people’s stuff.

Bruce:

But this leaves me still a bit confused, as Bart told this student that letter been compressed  means
fear of poverty, fear of being broke, and wouldn’t that also mean Narrow minded or Selective listener, or could this also mean Reticence?

Which still leaves me with the question about the letters O’s seems to be glued to each other, perhaps you or Bart may have the answer on this quest?

Sorry to bother you again about bothering you again with a question !!
Much appreciated for your help once again.

Yours in good faith

Do have further a nice day.

——— Bart’s Answer ———

Bruce,

Nice Transcript:

It is very helpful for you to give me the quote in context when you have a question.
There is over 15 years of recordings available to students, so questions are easier to
answer with the handwriting sample and context included.

Here is my expanded answer:

The idea of “spacing between words” or “touching” is a italian / german idea based in what is now commonly called gestalt graphology.

To answer the question, I have referenced a book on italian graphology which gives a good “cluster” of associated personality traits with this “touching” element.  However, with most gestalt descriptions… there can be lots of variables because it is based on a many elements and not just a single stroke.

In the Paris Hilton analysis,
I meant that her letters had little or no space between the letter and the next letter. They were actually touching.  There was intentional  reference about the form of the letter (narrow e or reticence).  The conversation was soley about spacing between the letters and words.

This is a ‘gestalt’ concept, which I am planning on discussing in detail as part of
the Italian Graphology Course later this month, November 24th, for the Gold/ Silver members.

http://handwritinguniversity.com/members/members-only/special-events/tele-class-schedule/

I’m not convinced there is an exact meaning which can be 100% predictable, but there is some agreement among the  italian and german graphologist on on tendencies with large space between letters and lack of
space between letters.

Large space between letters : generosity and friendly, expansive and cheerful.

Lack of space between letters: (touching): excessively pre-occupied with drawing
their own conclusions, but never succeeding out of fear of being wrong.  A substantial
sign of intellect and emotional anxiety.

This data was take from page 120.
“Graphology : Theory and Practice” by Lamberto Trobino and
Livio Zanin of the The G. Moretti Graphological Institute of Italy copyright 2011 Scriptor Books.

Posted in .Weekly Newsletters, graphology, handwritinganalysis, kerning, letters, spacing, touching | Comments Off

Warning over children’s ‘appalling’ handwriting skills

As most of you know, US & UK  schools are rapidly removing “cursive handwriting” from the elementary schools curriculum in favor of computer skills and classes which prepare the student for standardized tests.

Is the removal of cursive handwriting going to effect the ability of graphology to provide insight into character? How about the children’s ability to read. This article from the department for psychological and brain sciences at Indiana University has some strong evidence it does.  This article comes from the UK’s leading newspaper:  The Telegraph.

Warning over children’s ‘appalling’ handwriting skills

Children are struggling to write their own name because growing numbers of schools are shunning traditional handwriting lessons, academics have warned

By Graeme Paton, Education Editor

Click to read article enlarged to full screen

Children are struggling to write their own name because growing numbers of schools are shunning traditional handwriting lessons, academics have warned.

Education standards are at risk as pupils are increasingly allowed to submit essays digitally using email, memory sticks or even presenting PowerPoint displays, it was claimed.

Prof Carey Jewitt, from London University’s Institute of Education, said students’ handwriting skills were “absolutely appalling”, adding that many failed to get the practice they needed at home or in the classroom.

Other academics warned that a failure to teach children to write may stunt their development and hold them back in the classroom.

It comes after the publication of primary school exam results this summer showed that pupils perform worse in writing than any other core subject.

A quarter of 11-year-olds failed to reach the standards expected for their age in writing, compared with less than 20 per cent in reading and maths, figures showed.

Prof Jewitt, who has been leading research into the relationship between handwriting and technology for the last 10 years, said the amount of lesson time devoted to the skill had plummeted.

A failure to teach handwriting at a young age may harm children's development, academics claim.

“Little children may not be able to write their names but most can type them,” she told the Times Educational Supplement.

“Even families on a very low income are using email, using Skype.

“Students’ handwriting we have seen is absolutely appalling because they are not getting any practice. They aren’t handwriting at home.”

Observations of lessons in secondary schools suggest that handwriting has now all but disappeared from the classroom, she said.

Teachers increasingly prepare their lessons in digital form in a range of subjects, including English, before presenting them on high-tech white boards.

Many children are also allowed to submit essays as computer print-outs, send them to teachers by email or hand in work using memory sticks.

Dr Karin James, from the department for psychological and brain sciences at Indiana University in the United States, told the TES that a failure to develop handwriting skills undermined children’s reading ability.

“This is setting their brains up to be able to process letters and words,” she said. “That doesn’t happen with keyboarding or even with tracing the letters.

“Creating the form, stroke by stroke, seems to be very important. They need to produce the letters in their minds, then create them on paper.”

One study from Warwick University in 2008 suggested that children who struggled to write fluently devoted more brain capacity to getting words onto a page during tests – interfering with their ability to generate ideas, select vocabulary or plan work properly.

A Department for Education spokesman said: “Handwriting is the most fundamental building block of being educated.

“Every single parent expects their children to be taught how to properly write at school. The current National Curriculum stipulates this is an absolute central part of primary school lessons.

“This is a pretty esoteric debate. No one is saying that keyboard skills aren’t important – but if people like Bill Gates and the late Steve Jobs had to learn to write, then so can pupils in schools today. “

 


The most effective way to effect positive change in your child using the kid’s workbook is when you, the parent or teacher, are working on your “Adult’s” workbook at the same time. This creates a time to learn together and you may improve yourself, too. The adults workbook is not to improve your handwriting, it was designed six years before the kid’s workbook to assist you with setting goals and using grapho-therapy to improve yourself. This combination kit includes: One Adult’s Workbook, one Kid’s Workbook, Two instructional audio CD’s, a Special Report, the Grapho-Deck.


 

Posted in .Weekly Newsletters, Handwriting, cursive handwriting, handwriting skills, handwritinganalysis | Comments Off

Level 301 Certification Course Index

This is the Certification Level membership area for handwriting certification candidates. Everything you need to pass your written tests is contained withing this online course.  Whether you have the materials “shipped to your door” , or you are learning entirely online… this section contains the essential learning tools for you to master the content and become certified.

Please click on the graphic above to access the index.


You are logged in as
* Email:
* You have access to this level and under: Array

——————

—> Listen to the audio above.
—> Read the 12 steps below
—> Begin your Certification Program.

 

Certification Home Study Course Checklist

This is a new checklist created specifically for students enrolled into the home study course.
You will need to print out this checklist and as you complete the tasks, you can fill out the
initial field next to the task. This will help you know where you are at in the course and what
you need to complete.

Print Emotional Gauge and Practice Slant

This printable Emotional Gauge is to be copied onto a plastic translucent clear sheet
for use with the section of the course on Slant, Size, Pressure and Baseline.  If you do
not “make” your own gauge and practice with it… you will never master the proper
measurement techniques.  Do not skip this step.  You cannot “estimate it correctly.”

Print The Dictionary & Grapho-Deck Cards for Quick Reference

These high resolution Graphodeck cards are available in pdf form and are to be
copied or printed onto heavy paper so you can reference 51 of the 99 basic traits while
you practice doing live handwriting analysis wherever you go.  In order to master
the complete dictionary, visit the 201 Primary Trait Dictionary section and download
the Primary Trait Dictionary which contains all 99 traits which you will be responsible
for knowing during your final exam. Download the 201 Dictionary Here.

Read Dr. Ray Walker’s Course Textbook

This book is available in PDF format for easy download. This is the main text
for the certification course and includes references, samples and chapter tests.
We recommend completing each written test at the end of each chapter you read
and do not continue reading until the written tests is completed.

Complete Each of 21 Written Chapter Tests

Complete the 21 certification tests at your own pace after studying each
chapter. It is recommended that you watch videos, listen to audio sections
and perform your own analysis related to each chapter in Walker’s book
before taking the next test.

Listen to All of the AUDIO Recordings of Live Seminars

These essential lecture hours of lecture and “printed class handouts” are critical to
mastery of the program.  You must download, print, and listen to every minute.
The Classroom Style Instruction can be downloaded as MP3′s for playing on
your iPod, MP3 player or desktop iTunes program. You
can even burn them to a CD for listening in you car. It is recommended that you
listen to these lessons several times to retain as much information as possible.
Most student print out the “handouts” and place them in a three ring binder for
quick reference when listening to the lectures.

Watch All of the Streaming VIDEO Lessons

Each Seminar Video Lesson is divided into smaller parts for you to download
to your computer and play with your QuickTime player. You can also view
them online as Streaming Flash Video Files wile accessing the internet. Video
Lessons include in-depth explanations, guest instructors and audience participation.
Be sure to download the support materials and samples referenced in each section.

Read Bart Baggett’s Book:
Handwriting Analysis Secrets of Love, Sex and Relationships

This book is available in PDF format for you to download and reference with the
section of the course on Love, Sex and Relationships. It includes handwriting
analysis and Neuro Linguistic Programming techniques that can be applied to
relationships and compatibility.

Read Bart Baggett’s Book:
Success Secrets of the Rich and Happy

This book is available in PDF format for you to download and reference with the
section of the course on Success, Graphotherapy and Roadblocks. It includes
handwriting traits relating to success, roadblocks to success and NLP techniques
that can be applied to setting and achieving your goals for greater success.  You must
read the first 137 pages in order to sit for your certification exam.

Grapho-Therapy Teleclass Mp3 file & Workbook

This book can totally change your life and the life of those around you.
During live tele-class, the author himself, Bart Baggett will be coaches you through
the details in completing the workbook for the biggest personal gains!
This book will be emailed to you upon request.  Due to many copyright infringements
on this valuable book, it is no longer download able here.   Please request and copy
from the support page.

Watch Bonus VIDEOS: Hiring Roleplay Exercise, Verbal Analysis,
Slant Review, Describing Traits as Metaphors & Test Review

Use these streaming videos from popular newsletters and online lessons for further
in-depth training before completing the course and taking the oral part of the final exam.

Listen to Classic AUDIO Tapes & Reference Handwriting Samples

This bonus audio contains over 16 hours of handwriting analysis discussion and a
manual for you to download, containing over 70 pages of unique, hard-to-find handwriting
samples of famous people including: OJ Simpson, Bill Clinton, Ross Perot and dozens
of other well-known politicians, stars, criminals and psychopaths!

Take the Live Oral Final Exam

The final oral exam will be given by top trained faculty members to insure you have
gained the required knowledge to become an expert certified handwriting analyst.
A small scheduling & testing fee due will be due at the time of oral exam.

Take Advantage of Exclusive Discounts for 301 Students Here!

Next Step: Upgrade to the Level 401 Marketing Course

Posted in .Free Preview, 301, Level 301 Certification Level Course, bart baggett, certification, handwriting analysis, handwritinganalysis | Comments Off

Celebrity Interview with Author Brian Moreland

Bart Baggett interviews Thriller Author Brian Moreland about his own use of grapho-therapy, success traits, essential elements of a thriller story and how other people can also achieve really big goals (like becoming a best selling author.)

Texas born author Brian Moreland, is paving the way for thriller and suspense authors everywhere. Growing up with horror influences such as Stephen King and Dean Koontz, he has made waves for his best selling self published book, Shadows In The Mist which has won several awards. His most recent horror novel, Dead Of Winter is the first book to be released on a new horror line courtesy of Samhain Publishing.

Moreland isn’t just an accomplished author, he is also a film editor whose work has ranged from documentaries to major television commercials. He has also written several short stories, Chasing The Dragon and The Dealer Of Needs. Moreland’s blog, Dark Lucidity chronicles his writing journey and also includes his photography from his many adventures.

In this captivating 43 minute interview, you will discover:

  • The story behind how Brian edited the Success Secrets of the Rich & Happy
  • How many rejections in takes to become a published author.
  • The success secret told to Brian by a very famous author in 1994.
  • Brian’s handwriting and how graphology changed his life.
  • Sneak peak into Brian’s latest thriller.
  • What makes a good movie and a great story.
  • How you can apply these career tips for your own goals.

 

Listen to the interview here:

Or, right click here to download to your PC, Mac, Ipod, Iphone, etc.   BrianMoreland.MP3

Click the image below to see the high resolution of Brian’s own handwriting.

You can find out more information on Brian’s latest book at his website www.brianmoreland.com

Link to read first 3 chapters, free : http://www.brianmoreland.blogspot.com

The link to buy the book direct from the publisher:
http://store.samhainpublishing.com/dead-winter-p-6507.html


Brief Description:

New! Bart Baggett’s latest book reveals the psychological “Success Secrets of the Rich and Happy.” It is available now in INSTANT DOWNLOAD from anywhere in the world with no shipping.

This will be the most important book you read all year! Only $19.99 and includes a free audio bonus. Over 435 pages of NLP, handwriting, psychology, financial strategy, and so much more.


 

Posted in .Weekly Newsletters, Dead of Winter, author, brian moreland, celebrity, handwritinganalysis, horror, interview, thriller | Comments Off

Late Steve Jobs Signature Analyzed….

The resignation and death of  Steve Jobs as CEO of Apple Inc caused a global shock. The iconic CEO has been showing signs of poor health for the past many years. His handwriting defies logic… is this the signature of a revolutionary thinker?  Or just a humble computer programmer who thinks out of the box?


Before co-founding Apple, Jobs, a college drop-out, travelled through India in seventies in search of spiritual guidance. Very few people know that he suggested the name of the company (Apple) to co-founder Steve Wozniak after a visit to a commune in Oregon he referred to as an “apple orchard.”

There are several stories about the man — both interesting and inspiring. But we won’t repeat them here. Here, we will analyse his signature against the views held about him.

An inspiring Jobs had a lot of hard edges: According to Jay Elliot, a former vice-president at Apple who worked with Jobs in the eighties, says he was very aggressive and oftentimes alienated colleagues and investors with his my-way-or-the-highway attitude. Elliot said he was a witness to the acrimony between Jobs and former Apple Chief Executive John Sculley who often clashed on ideas, products and the direction of the company. At a meeting in Hawaii, they blew up against each other. Jobs left the company soon after, saying he was fired.

Steve Jobs's signature

Elliot’s views establish two things about Jobs: first, he was very aggressive, and second, he was acrimonious. Does his signature confirm the two points? Yes, it does. The beginning stroke of the first letter (S), which starts below the baseline, shows Jobs was resentful and he often misplaced his anger. And because he had a right slant, he often expressed his feelings without inhibitions.

Steve Jobs Signature

Steve Jobs Signature

The second point is about aggression, which is seen in the angular stroke at the beginning of j in Jobs and. When this angularity appears in the middle zone, the writer has a tendency to show aggression in his day-to-day life. However, such a writer, because of his impulsive attitude (shown by the right slant of handwriting),  regret his actions. So did Jobs. Here is the proof: About his face-off with Sculley and subsequent departure from Apple, Jobs told a Stanford graduating class in 2005: “It was awful-tasting medicine, but I guess the patient needed it. Sometimes life’s gonna hit you in the head with a brick. Don’t lose faith.”

Hard-working Jobs was a ‘genius’: Former eBay Inc chief Meg Whitman said recently: “Steve Jobs is the business genius of our generation. His contributions to Apple, his contributions to technology, frankly his contributions to America, are unparalleled in the business world. He is amazing.”

According to graphology, people who have simplified handwriting are intelligent. Steve Jobs’s signature is plain and simple. No embellishments, no unnecessary strokes. Plus, Jobs is someone who likes to see jobs done fast, quickly, indicated by the pointed tops of his middle-zone letters, such as those in ‘n’ in Steven. Hence, his productivity has been way above average. Now wonder Bill Gates, the co-founder of Microsoft, has called Jobs the most inspiring person in the tech industry and President Barack Obama has held him up as the embodiment of the American Dream.

Caustic and forceful with words: Ed Niehaus,  hired by Jobs to do PR for Apple, said Jobs liked to push others to do their best. “When Steve Jobs weighs in, it is with a simple set of verdicts: insanely great; really, really great; and shit,” Niehaus said. Being chewed up and spat out by Jobs is an experience most Apple employees who have come in contact with Jobs can relate to, a report says.

As per handwriting analysis, a long t-bar is indicative of the writer’s healthy energy to push things forward, and say things in a very forceful manner. Jobs’s t-bar is fairly long, and appears to have been drawn with a firm pen pressure. Such writers are assertive, and they like to ensure their orders are executed exactly the way they want. The confirmation of this attitude is here: “Basically Steve tells you exactly what he wants and you just go build it,” says a former iPhone engineer.

At the same time, Jobs is a humble man: A look at Jobs’s resignation letter tells you that the man’s feet are on the ground. “I have always said if there ever came a day when I could no longer meet my duties and expectations as Apple’s CEO, I would be the first to let you know. Unfortunately, that day has come,” he said in a brief letter announcing his resignation.”

The letter suggests he is a humble man. But people may look at the tone of this letter with cynicism, and say he was just being formal there. So, we look at his signature to ascertaing if this person for whom people use words such as “ruthless, perfectionist and dictator” is capable of being humble.

The answer again is yes. The moderate size of the signature, especially the first letter, confirms that the larger-than-life Jobs is indeed a humble person. In a report, Guy Kawasaki, a former Apple employee, said: “Most mere mortals cannot understand a person like Steve Jobs. He is the greatest CEO in the history of man. He’s just got a different operating system.”

(Quotes taken from news reports) 

Article Source:
Write Choice
Interactive website on handwriting analysis
Mumbai, India
www.writechoice.co.in/writechoice

Posted in International Articles, apple ceo, handwritinganalysis, signature handwriting analysis of steve jobs, steve jobs, steve jobs as a boss and leader, steve jobs personality | Comments Off

Is Cursive handwriting going away forever in US schools?

Are your kids not learning cursive in school anymore?

Are your kids not learning cursive in school anymore?

Cursive handwriting no longer a focus in Illinois elementaries

Skill’s usefulness on wane, some school officials say

By Lisa Black, Chicago Tribune reporter

Vicki Zurkowski wonders if today’s cursive handwriting will be tomorrow’s hieroglyphics — an ancient form of writing decipherable by only a few experts in a specialized field.

The Elmhurst mother was disturbed to learn that her children’s school district will spend less time teaching the flowing loops of cursive in order to squeeze more 21st century lessons, such as keyboarding, into the classroom day.

“We are losing an art,” said Zurkowski, who wonders how her two youngest children will develop a unique signature or read notes written on greeting cards. “Maybe it’s something I will have to teach my kids myself.”

Others were also shocked when Elmhurst School District 205 announced in a recent newsletter that cursive will be scaled back in the third-grade curriculum to “prepare students to function in a technologically advanced society.”

Elsewhere in Illinois, school districts have also begun to downplay cursive to conform to a new set of “common core standards” adopted last year. At least 44 other states have signed on to the new standards, which dictate the skills students should learn at each grade level. The program sets the stage for a national standardized exam to measure how students compare state to state, beginning in 2014.

The national standards do not include cursive. They do include writing with digital tools — such as keyboards or tablet computers. That has provoked some angst in places such as Indiana, which dropped its cursive requirements when adopting the national program.

Illinois has never required cursive as a learning standard, leaving control to local school districts, said Mary Fergus, spokeswoman for the Illinois State Board of Education.

The national trend concerns some parents who remember spending hours painstakingly perfecting their loops and curls for legibility and speed. Yet many recognize that their teenage children rarely use this graceful style of writing, which some say is no longer relevant now that even historical documents such as the Declaration of Independence can be quickly downloaded as printed text.

“I do think there will be this tug on people’s hearts, that we are losing something,” said Linda Karlen Elliott, an Elmhurst parent who also teaches writing at Oakton Community College. “But we are losing it anyway. … I don’t see the kids being very upset about it.”

With the prevalence of computers, fewer students are assigned projects that require handwritten prose. By high school, most are required to compose papers electronically.

Some teens say they have had so little practice that they can’t read or write cursive.

“The only cursive I ever use is just my signature now,” said Danny Blitstein, 18, a senior at Glenbrook North High School in Northbrook, who believes the last time he wrote in cursive was in fifth grade. “When it stopped being mandatory, I stopped using it.”

At issue for educators is whether cursive is an essential part of a child’s early grade-school years, and how much time should be devoted to it. No one has suggested eliminating the teaching of manuscript, or print, handwriting.

Studies have shown that writing by hand in any form increases memory, helps students learn to pronounce words when learning to read, and sharpens fine motor skills.

“Handwriting, be it manuscript or cursive, offers kinesthetic practice that strengthens reading and writing skills,” said Gen Bentley, a third-grade teacher at Bannockburn Elementary School. “In my experience, some children are more successful with cursive than they are with manuscript.”

In Elmhurst, students will learn to write in manuscript in kindergarten and first grade and will focus on electronic keyboarding skills in third through fifth grades, according to the newsletter sent to parents. Students will get a template of the alphabet written in cursive and will have cursive nameplates on their desks to help them recognize and write their name, it states.

“We just need to be sure people know that we are not eliminating cursive,” said Melea Smith, District 205 spokeswoman.

But when asked how many minutes a day would be spent on cursive, and how that compares with past years, an administrator declined to be specific.

“Since the de-emphasis is so new, it is going to be hard to determine in advance how long it takes for students to acquire letter recognition capabilities,” Charles Johns, assistant superintendent for curriculum and instruction, wrote in an emailed response to questions. “We will collect feedback over time and make whatever adjustments that we can make.”

He said few parents had complained to principals.

Steve Graham, professor of education at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn., fears that elementary students are spending less time on writing in general, whether it is manuscript or cursive.

“There is not a whole lot of writing instruction after third grade,” said Graham, who conducted a national survey of primary school teachers in 2007.

Handwriting remains important because it influences both the reader and writer, Graham said. Children who don’t master handwriting may avoid writing altogether.

“On the reader end, it is about legibility,” Graham said. “If your handwriting is so illegible you can’t read it … there’s a much more insidious effect. People form judgments about the quality of your ideas based on your legibility of handwriting. It influences your grades.”

That doesn’t surprise Jeanette Jordan, writing coordinator for Glenbrook North High School, who insists that her seventh-grade daughter use cursive when writing letters to relatives.

“It looks more, I don’t know, polite,” she said.

Yet some educators are puzzled by the reluctance to drop cursive.

The National Association of Elementary School Principals has not taken a position on it, saying the decision is best left to local leaders. But Rob Monson, president of the association, said he sees no need for his own first-grade son to learn cursive.

“Basically, you sign a contract or a check,” said Monson, a principal in Parkston, S.D. “That is the extent that most people use cursive.”

He said cursive is the most difficult skill taught in elementary grades “because cursive is actually an art form.”

“There are some people who are good in art and some who aren’t.”

This article was in the Chicago Tribune on Sunday, September 25th, 2011.  Please leave our comments below.  Simply register and login to leave a comment. (It’s free to leave comments and register.)

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