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In reply to the discussion: If a person cannot read or write cursive, are they "functionally illiterate?" [View all]Mariana
(15,221 posts)173. If the job requires reading cursive, the employer should teach the employee.
If they give the new hire a handwriting book for adults and have them spend an hour on it each workday, the employee will be reading cursive within a couple of weeks. If they don't want to be bothered with that, they should include it in the qualifications in the job listings, and ask about it during interviews. It's no secret that many young people weren't taught cursive in school.
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If a person cannot read or write cursive, are they "functionally illiterate?" [View all]
PeaceWave
Dec 26
OP
Yes, to be licensed to drive a manual, but you can take the test in an automatic car. You will have an 'auto only' code
Celerity
Dec 28
#163
Their schools and their teachers failed them by not teaching cursive in grade school
FakeNoose
Dec 27
#112
That's a tough one. I think it will, if it hasn't already, become a 'specialized' skill.
Joinfortmill
Dec 26
#2
I could see not writing it but seriously, how hard is it to decipher your own language? It's not cuneiform ffs
Blues Heron
Dec 26
#6
Errors can be deadly... (or at least lead to massive liability--even for an accounting firm but more so elsewhere)
hlthe2b
Dec 26
#15
The failure to understand by so many on this thread, to use their imagination as to where
hlthe2b
Dec 26
#29
Alternatively is there a reason that those places that still use cursive actually use it or is it a relic?
EdmondDantes_
Dec 26
#50
I wrote here and in great detail upstream why this is not the case now. Given you refuse to read
hlthe2b
Dec 26
#51
Why should an entire office abandon using cursive just because a new employee isn't able to read it? n/t
MichMan
Dec 26
#71
Maybe there's a good reason why organizations distributing hard-copy forms to be filled out
Emrys
Dec 28
#144
The last time I was in the E.R. the doctor was accompanied by a medical scribe...
hunter
Dec 28
#150
AGAIN! You TOTALLY MISS THE POINT. Of course hospitals are computerized at every turn. But that
hlthe2b
Dec 28
#151
I get that you have no clue that hospitals have records that include scanned notes, as does their pharmacy
hlthe2b
Dec 27
#106
When the debate opponent puts words in your mouth or makes assumptions about your past
ThreeNoSeep
Dec 27
#110
Again, you show you have no clue about what several of us are speaking to in medicine
hlthe2b
Dec 27
#111
It is not merely what I think. It is fact and 24 states thus far are putting cursive back in educational
hlthe2b
Dec 27
#109
One more instance of the disdain people have for preceding generations. Everone should be taught to READ cursive.
LAS14
Dec 26
#25
Late boomer here. I haven't written in true cursive since college exams the 1980s.
Eugene
Dec 26
#33
If reading cursive was a job requirement, it.should have been stated as such clearly and up-front
0rganism
Dec 26
#39
There are dozens of job duties for nearly every job that aren't specifically mentioned in job requirements
MichMan
Dec 26
#52
So you're comparing not reading cursive to showing up drunk and swearing at customers?
0rganism
Dec 26
#66
I'm saying people can & are held accountable for a myriad of things that aren't specifically mentioned in an interview
MichMan
Dec 26
#70
Reading and writing cursive is a skill, not drinking on the job and not stealing aren't skills.
Ms. Toad
Dec 26
#78
So what happens to legal documents if someone doesn't have a "signature"? Presume
allegorical oracle
Dec 26
#49
If you can't write cursive how do sign a check, like in the westerns where they made their mark?
doc03
Dec 26
#64
I rarely sign checks nowadays, but when I do, my signature's degraded into a stylized squiggle.
Emrys
Dec 26
#68
Although I think everyone should know it, I also feel that's it's kinda dumb to use it in 2024
Polybius
Dec 26
#81
Another generation-division post. It means the employee isn't ambitious enough to take a little time to learn, doesn't
betsuni
Dec 27
#89
Well, most people over a certain age write in cursive - you'd have as much luck asking my mother to write letters in
Midwestern Democrat
Dec 28
#148
Writing in cursive is one of the few things the young people around me are highly impressed by.
appmanga
Dec 27
#103
Teaching kids cursive is actually quite easy and I did it as "bell work" every morning.
La Coliniere
Dec 27
#107
No. Just because something is illegible to you does not mean you're illiterate.
WhiskeyGrinder
Dec 27
#115
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
Dec 27
#123
I'm much more interested in people who know how to use a keyboard than read/produce scribble.
Gore1FL
Dec 27
#127
Just did a quick job search. There are 75+ jobs listing the ability to read cursive.
Renew Deal
Dec 28
#139
Taking time to sign something is a sign of respect to those to whom we address a document.
PeaceWave
Dec 28
#157
No, but if the job requires reading cursive it could be disqualifying not to be able to
nini
Dec 28
#159
The apps might be forbidden if your work requires a security clearance.
JustABozoOnThisBus
Dec 29
#175
If it's a way to write faster, as you say, then why should it go extinct? That makes no sense.
PeaceWave
Dec 29
#182
Because people don't use pen and paper anywhere near as much as when cursive was a thing
Patton French
Dec 29
#183
Failure to teach cursive is furthering the United States falling behind the rest of the world.
madaboutharry
Dec 29
#180