How often, on a daily basis, is cursive writing used? This lost art is a mandatory subject in school across the United States of America. Thousands of students every day are being taught a form of writing that is near illegible and will never be used after high school. Many innovators have decided that cursive is outdated and should be eliminated from the curriculum. However, opposing them are the old fashioned men and women who associate sentimentality with cursive. Despite their opinion, cursive writing is on the verge of being completely useless. Teachers teach cursive writing. Every year, from September to May, students are lugging themselves to school only to learn a tool they will never use beyond grade twelve. …show more content…
The pro-cursive-writer says it herself. Our society’s abilities are advancing and signatures are soon to become something of the past. Pen on paper is already being replaced by our own fingertips. All it takes to log into an iPhone is a quick fingerprint scan. Many cursive-lovers have decided that cursive should be taught because signatures and autographs are such a prominent part of our everyday life. Signatures and autographs can be forged without extraneous effort. On the other hand, it would be near impossible for an average person to replicate someone else’s fingerprint. Arguing that cursive should be taught just for the sake of a signature or autograph is pointless, for our technological advancements have far surpassed that archaic writing. In the future, fingerprints could be a substitute for signatures. It is time to move on. Children grow up learning how to click their tiny fingers on keyboards, memorizing what buttons do what, and still the teaching of cursive is preventing them from exploring their full abilities. Their brains should be utilized for more inventive fields than cursive writing. Rosencrats speaks the truth when she says, “[Cursive] isn’t compatible with today’s world.” People who feel attached to cursive writing because new ideas are foreign to them need to let their views go. Times are changing fast and cursive is in the