Very well said. I too have a problem with schools not teaching proper penmanship, printing and writing or as modern teachers like to say block letters and cursive. I wish my grade school days had more writing practice to correctly form letters and write better in cursive. It is an art that I learned to appreciate after I was out of school several years and I was able to read some old records of meetings for the volunteer fire department where I belonged. Such neat cursive those fellows had. There was a pride in what they wrote and how they wrote. They also used fountain pens which I chose to start using (after not using one since childhood) for several reasons, one of which is to improve my penmanship and do what little I can to preserve cursive. I also chose at the same time to start typing instead of using a computer for all my writing. Again, it is not as boring as computer generated perfect text. Typewritten has class, character and as with the hand-written note the writers personality.
Very well said. You demonstrated one reason to use a typewriter in your text. Knowing how to break up a long word at the end of a line rather than have the computer do so connects you to the basics of the language, in the same way that a slide rule connects you to the mathematical processes. However, I dispute the notion that cursive is less efficient. One Morse Code training course I took *insists* that the student use cursive to keep the pen on the surface and to think in words, not letters. Of course I then set about looking for a typewriter for copying code...
Very well said. I too have a problem with schools not teaching proper penmanship, printing and writing or as modern teachers like to say block letters and cursive. I wish my grade school days had more writing practice to correctly form letters and write better in cursive. It is an art that I learned to appreciate after I was out of school several years and I was able to read some old records of meetings for the volunteer fire department where I belonged. Such neat cursive those fellows had. There was a pride in what they wrote and how they wrote. They also used fountain pens which I chose to start using (after not using one since childhood) for several reasons, one of which is to improve my penmanship and do what little I can to preserve cursive. I also chose at the same time to start typing instead of using a computer for all my writing. Again, it is not as boring as computer generated perfect text. Typewritten has class, character and as with the hand-written note the writers personality.
ResponderExcluirYou are right about all of this, of course. Fortunately the computer can help us few, perceptive typewriter fans find each other around the world.
ResponderExcluirVery well said. You demonstrated one reason to use a typewriter in your text. Knowing how to break up a long word at the end of a line rather than have the computer do so connects you to the basics of the language, in the same way that a slide rule connects you to the mathematical processes. However, I dispute the notion that cursive is less efficient. One Morse Code training course I took *insists* that the student use cursive to keep the pen on the surface and to think in words, not letters. Of course I then set about looking for a typewriter for copying code...
ResponderExcluir