For 30 minutes each day, Mikayla Blalock’s fourth grade students at Samuel E. Hubbard Elementary School in Monroe County focus on what some consider a lost art in the digital age: cursive writing.
HB 127 would require all public school students in grades 2 through 5 to learn cursive and, for the first time, prove they’re proficient.
This article was featured in New York’s One Great Story newsletter. Sign up here. Last winter, the federal government released the results of its semi-annual reading and math tests of fourth- and ...
In early June, several of Canada’s largest mall owners attended meetings in Toronto to hear from a B.C.-based real estate executive about her plan to take over the leases of more than two dozen former ...
Treasure Coast lawmakers propose bills requiring elementary students to read and write cursive, reviving a skill dropped from ...
It may seem like a tie to the past, but 13 Fact Finders looked into Arizona’s cursive resurgence and found it’s about more ...
I read with great interest the letter from Sharon, in Middletown, Ohio. I, too, mourn the loss of cursive writing and know many young people who are able ...
A comprehensive and exhaustive list of records spanning far and wide, touching everything from Carolina alt-country and ...
A teacher reads to a group of children at the Carrie Murray Nature Center Forest Preschool in Baltimore. Credit: Jackie Mader/The Hechinger Report The Hechinger Report covers one topic: education.
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