• Encrypt-Keeper@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    We are currently teaching six year olds skills they need, without cursive. I don’t think any of them are good candidates for removal. And if we were to add more, cursive would certainly be at the bottom of the list.

    And we’ve already gone over historical documents, they’ve been transcribed. Some irrational fear of transcription isn’t a good reason to teach cursive. There are far more historical documents that exist in other languages, than there are in modern English cursive, so in your scenario we’d have to teach every kid to read and write in every single language that currently exists or used to exist just so that every single person in the country can verify the authenticity of every transcription ever made? If you can’t trust ANY historian or educator to relay information accurately then what are we supposed to do, abolish the school system entirely? Nobody can learn anything from anybody else because nobody can trust anyone but themselves? Ok bud you keep your tinfoil hat on?

    It’s unlikely I’m on the dumb hill since I’m on the hill that has already prevailed. I stand on this hill with the rest of American society and educators who seem to be doing just fine… you can die alone on your hill I guess.

    • Tavarin
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      arrow-down
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      Name them. I learned cursive and a bunch of other subjects at 6, and I don’t feel like cursive needed to be replaced by anything.

      And by your logic we should just stop teaching history, because it’s already been studied. Let’s stop teaching math because we already created calculators. Let’s stop teaching second languages, because other people have already translated things.

      American society and educators who seem to be doing just fine

      hahahahaha, American education is garbage these days, no wonder you’re stuck on dumb hill.

      • Encrypt-Keeper@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Name them

        Cursive has been replaced by keyboarding and computer skills. Both far more useful and relevant in the age we live in.

        And by your logic we should just stop teaching history, because it’s already been studied.

        Uh, that would be your logic. Because you don’t trust somebody who studied history to teach it to you, because in your mind you can only trust things you’ve seen yourself, remember? We teach history out of books that were written by historians and educators, just like we study historical documents transcribed by historians and educators.

        Let’s stop teaching math because we already created calculators

        Calculators don’t do math for you. You have to understand math to use a calculator.

        Let’s stop teaching second languages, because other people have already translated things.

        We don’t learn second languages in order to transcribe things which have already been translated. You learn a second language to speak a second language.

        hahahahaha, American education is garbage these days, no wonder you’re stuck on dumb hill.

        Maybe I’d be less dumb if I didn’t waste so much time learning cursive?

        And maybe if you wasted less time learning cursive you could have learned how to follow your own thread of logic? You’re literally all over the place and you’re devolving into more and more nonsense. It’s shocking how much energy you’ve wasted championing a dead and buried art for absolutely no reason.

        • Tavarin
          link
          fedilink
          English
          arrow-up
          1
          ·
          1 year ago

          replaced by keyboarding and computer skills.

          I took those as well as cursive. Plenty of time for both.

          just like we study historical documents transcribed by historians and educators.

          And it’s always better to have the skills to read them yourself. And being able to read cursive opens up lots of interesting documents, many of which have not been transcribed.

          And once again, cursive is extremely easy to learn.

          You learn a second language to speak a second language.

          And to read in that language, and to translate from that language. Learning cursive is like learning a language, yet it is extremely easy to learn.

          if I didn’t waste so much time learning cursive

          What time? Cursive takes almost no time to learn. I learned it at the same time as learning print writing. It added almost no time to our writing classes, and I have the ability to read and write in both.

          Why are you wasting your energy on this then? You could have shut up many comments ago