Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

Rebl2

(14,960 posts)
63. I am getting
Thu Dec 26, 2024, 05:15 PM
Thursday

to be that way, but I can still do so when need be and can read cursive it as well.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

No, and sigh: 'not this shit again'. Voltaire2 Thursday #1
𝒮𝒶𝓎𝓈 𝓌𝒽𝑜? mahatmakanejeeves Thursday #5
not actually cursive, 'cursive like'. Voltaire2 Thursday #7
If I wrote it in my own handwriting, no one could read it. mahatmakanejeeves Thursday #14
I can't read mine. multigraincracker Thursday #26
" If I wrote it in my own handwriting" - ok, Dr. Mahatmakanejeeves FSogol Thursday #47
I am getting Rebl2 Thursday #63
Agree with Voltaire 2 indigovalley Thursday #16
Or people could learn the skill SheltieLover Thursday #24
but why? It isn't required for any practical skills. Voltaire2 Thursday #38
Pls see post 15 & 21 below SheltieLover Thursday #41
Many other things make that connection and are much more practical JCMach1 Thursday #79
There is no excuse for relinquishing any common form of communication SheltieLover Thursday #82
Do you do calligraphy? Long math? Use a slide rule? JCMach1 Yesterday #83
Those are obviously not common forms of communication SheltieLover Yesterday #84
Can you read Middle English? What about Old English? JCMach1 Yesterday #86
Pls see posts #15 & 21 SheltieLover Yesterday #87
Message auto-removed Name removed Yesterday #90
Language literacy and grammar evolve JCMach1 20 hrs ago #96
That's just it: it is no longer a "common form of communication" NickB79 19 hrs ago #97
Clearly it is or these employees wouldn't be fired. jimfields33 9 hrs ago #120
Exactly Betty Boom 8 hrs ago #124
Why? Ms. Toad Thursday #43
very good point. raccoon Yesterday #91
+9999 krawhitham Thursday #18
My daugher is 16 DeepWinter Thursday #27
I always saw it as a creative opportunity TexasBushwhacker 16 hrs ago #119
When I learned cursive it was the opposite of a creative opportunity. Mariana 6 hrs ago #132
As well as pencils to that same degree. Torchlight Thursday #61
So much shit is being thrown to the wayside by the new generation. William769 22 hrs ago #95
Their schools and their teachers failed them by not teaching cursive in grade school FakeNoose 16 hrs ago #112
Well said. Captain Stern 16 hrs ago #113
You called it. ThreeNoSeep 16 hrs ago #114
It's clearly not Betty Boom 8 hrs ago #122
That's a tough one. I think it will, if it hasn't already, become a 'specialized' skill. Joinfortmill Thursday #2
handwriting need not be 'cursive'. Voltaire2 Thursday #8
I believe in this conversation we are discussing cursive. Joinfortmill Thursday #19
Slight correction Betty Boom 8 hrs ago #121
This needs to be underscored. Displayed prominently on the web page is: JHB 5 hrs ago #142
Not all cursive is the same. padfun Thursday #3
Put cursive back in schools. Problem solved. jimfields33 Thursday #4
90 days? Thats funny.. getagrip_already Thursday #34
Maybe you're right. jimfields33 Thursday #35
Better to solve the problem by teaching an actual useful skill Orrex 16 hrs ago #117
I could see not writing it but seriously, how hard is it to decipher your own language? It's not cuneiform ffs Blues Heron Thursday #6
Depends on the chicken scratch you are trying to decipher krawhitham Thursday #20
Yup. Ms. Toad Thursday #77
Partly claudette Thursday #9
I have been reading/writing cursive for most of my life The Madcap Thursday #10
No being able to read cursive writing isn't an handicap LogDog75 Thursday #11
That makes too much sense. Haggard Celine 7 hrs ago #129
In 2024, no. RockRaven Thursday #12
But shorthand was never universal among literate people SheltieLover Thursday #23
I haven't needed that function for a looooong time. Iggo Thursday #13
Errors can be deadly... (or at least lead to massive liability--even for an accounting firm but more so elsewhere) hlthe2b Thursday #15
Concur with this Sympthsical Thursday #22
The failure to understand by so many on this thread, to use their imagination as to where hlthe2b Thursday #29
I'm with you SheltieLover Thursday #44
Alternatively is there a reason that those places that still use cursive actually use it or is it a relic? EdmondDantes_ Thursday #50
I wrote here and in great detail upstream why this is not the case now. Given you refuse to read hlthe2b Thursday #51
Speaking for myself, it's not that we don't understand, we just don't agree. Emrys Thursday #62
Why should an entire office abandon using cursive just because a new employee isn't able to read it? n/t MichMan Thursday #71
Because it could save lives? That seems a good enough reason to me. Emrys Thursday #75
If the computer system Karma13612 6 hrs ago #137
Maybe there's a good reason why organizations distributing hard-copy forms to be filled out Emrys 4 hrs ago #144
Thank you! Agree 100%- eom Karma13612 6 hrs ago #131
Absolutely! SheltieLover Thursday #45
The problem was that some idiot thought that writing a note in cursive... hunter Yesterday #88
way to TOTALLY miss the point. hlthe2b Yesterday #92
Thank you!!!! Betty Boom 8 hrs ago #125
What kind of a hospital uses cursive for warning labels? ThreeNoSeep 17 hrs ago #105
I get that you have no clue that hospitals have records that include scanned notes, as does their pharmacy hlthe2b 17 hrs ago #106
When the debate opponent puts words in your mouth or makes assumptions about your past ThreeNoSeep 17 hrs ago #110
Again, you show you have no clue about what several of us are speaking to in medicine hlthe2b 16 hrs ago #111
Can I just say... Betty Boom 8 hrs ago #128
What you "think" doesn't make it true... appmanga 17 hrs ago #108
It is not merely what I think. It is fact and 24 states thus far are putting cursive back in educational hlthe2b 17 hrs ago #109
I am relieved to Karma13612 5 hrs ago #141
Thank you for this Betty Boom 8 hrs ago #126
Bravo!!!!! Karma13612 6 hrs ago #133
Lockout/tagout was standard procedure decades ago where I worked Mariana 6 hrs ago #135
Certainly not canetoad Thursday #17
Depends on the job, but geneally I'd say yes. SheltieLover Thursday #21
One more instance of the disdain people have for preceding generations. Everone should be taught to READ cursive. LAS14 Thursday #25
No... Mike Nelson Thursday #28
LOL Prairie Gates Thursday #30
My Take ProfessorGAC Thursday #31
As evidenced by your students, the bulk of it ought to be decipherable... consider_this Thursday #59
Had A Thought ProfessorGAC Thursday #65
I quite like your idea, especially... consider_this Thursday #80
no. BlueWaveNeverEnd Thursday #32
Late boomer here. I haven't written in true cursive since college exams the 1980s. Eugene Thursday #33
Me neither. Mike 03 Thursday #37
The test shouldn't be "can I read this person's handwriting" Mike 03 Thursday #36
I suppose I could have written software in cursive. Voltaire2 Thursday #42
If reading cursive was a job requirement, it.should have been stated as such clearly and up-front 0rganism Thursday #39
There are dozens of job duties for nearly every job that aren't specifically mentioned in job requirements MichMan Thursday #52
So you're comparing not reading cursive to showing up drunk and swearing at customers? 0rganism Thursday #66
I'm saying people can & are held accountable for a myriad of things that aren't specifically mentioned in an interview MichMan Thursday #70
Well, there's cursive and there's curse-ive 0rganism Thursday #73
Reading and writing cursive is a skill, not drinking on the job and not stealing aren't skills. Ms. Toad Thursday #78
Agreed it doesn't make them "illiterate"; but snot Thursday #40
I had to learn cursive.... Xolodno Thursday #46
No. Of course not. NT Happy Hoosier Thursday #48
So what happens to legal documents if someone doesn't have a "signature"? Presume allegorical oracle Thursday #49
It doesn't have to be cursive. It can just be terrible handwriting. sakabatou Thursday #53
No. Xoan Thursday #54
How do you sign you name if you don't know cursive? bif Thursday #55
Like many of these anecdotes about the world of work and "the younger generation", Emrys Thursday #56
Just Google the scribbles The Madcap Thursday #57
Of course they're not functionally illiterate, but Susan Calvin Thursday #58
Don't think Rebl2 Thursday #60
If you can't write cursive how do sign a check, like in the westerns where they made their mark? doc03 Thursday #64
I rarely sign checks nowadays, but when I do, my signature's degraded into a stylized squiggle. Emrys Thursday #68
I remember getting my first letter that was printed out from a computer Mossfern Thursday #67
cursive is also good brain exercise. WarGamer Thursday #69
I can write cursive with both hands -- and no_hypocrisy Thursday #72
While I ForgedCrank Thursday #74
No. Would that exclude Braille? underpants Thursday #76
Although I think everyone should know it, I also feel that's it's kinda dumb to use it in 2024 Polybius Thursday #81
No, they aren't. No one is taught cursive in schools anymore. iemanja Yesterday #85
Another generation-division post. It means the employee isn't ambitious enough to take a little time to learn, doesn't betsuni Yesterday #89
If it's clearly written there shouldn't be any problem. BlueTsunami2018 Yesterday #93
Wow, we were taught cursive starting in the first grade. Emile 23 hrs ago #94
Replace "cursive" with "Latin" and see how silly this discussion sounds NickB79 19 hrs ago #98
I learning Latin is a good deal more difficult thucythucy 17 hrs ago #104
I'd make them read the Constitution or the Declaration of Independence Historic NY 19 hrs ago #99
no, unless the hire didn't think to plug it into an AI, in which case yes cadoman 19 hrs ago #100
If a person cannot read or write classic Latin, are they functionally illiterate? DBoon 18 hrs ago #101
I look at this from the other direction Unwind Your Mind 18 hrs ago #102
Writing in cursive is one of the few things the young people around me are highly impressed by. appmanga 18 hrs ago #103
Teaching kids cursive is actually quite easy and I did it as "bell work" every morning. La Coliniere 17 hrs ago #107
Teaching adults cursive is even easier. Mariana 6 hrs ago #140
No. Just because something is illegible to you does not mean you're illiterate. WhiskeyGrinder 16 hrs ago #115
Lol @ obsolete hobby skills dubiously deemed essential Orrex 16 hrs ago #116
All offense intended, but that partner sounds like an asshole Rob H. 16 hrs ago #118
I wouldn't call it illiterate. In this case, I would say, they lack a skill that is required for this particular job. Betty Boom 8 hrs ago #123
I'm much more interested in people who know how to use a keyboard than read/produce scribble. Gore1FL 8 hrs ago #127
Consequence comes home to roost... dobleremolque 7 hrs ago #130
Did it occur to you to give the kid a handwriting book Mariana 6 hrs ago #138
. dobleremolque 3 hrs ago #145
I had a mild stroke in 2016. Jeebo 6 hrs ago #134
No, they are not "functionally illiterate" Renew Deal 6 hrs ago #136
Just did a quick job search. There are 75+ jobs listing the ability to read cursive. Renew Deal 6 hrs ago #139
Bookmarking! Drum 5 hrs ago #143
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»If a person cannot read o...»Reply #63