1 / 47

The Case for Cursive

The Case for Cursive. William “Billy” Hatridge, MS, CAS, OTR/L Occupational Therapist and Certified Handwriting Specialist TheOTDad@gmail.com. What is Cursive?.

aprilk
Download Presentation

The Case for Cursive

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Casefor Cursive William “Billy” Hatridge, MS, CAS, OTR/L Occupational Therapist and Certified Handwriting Specialist TheOTDad@gmail.com

  2. What is Cursive? • Any style of penmanship in which some characters are written joined together in a flowing manner, generally for the purpose of making writing faster. • Formal cursive is generally joined, but casual cursive is a combination of joins and pen lifts. • The writing style can be further divided as “ligature”, "looped", or "italic".

  3. Cursive Subclasses • Ligature • Writing letters with lines connecting, so that one does not have to pick up the pen or pencil. • Looped • Writing with some ascenders and descenders looping. • Italic • Also known as chancery cursive, is a semi-cursive, slightly sloped style of handwriting and calligraphy

  4. History of Cursive • Ancient Romans were among the first to develop a written script for transactions and correspondence • Penmanship became a specialized discipline found primarily in monastic settings • Charlemagne tasked an English monk with standardizing the craft. • Influenced by Roman characters, Carolingian miniscule was designed for maximum legibility and featured lowercase letters, word separation and punctuation.

  5. History of Cursive • Johannes Gutenberg used a dense Gothic approach for his printing press in the mid-15th century • Italian humanists soon revolted against the heavy look by reverting to a more Carolingian script and inventing a cursive form of it, known as Italic • Elegant handwriting emerged as a status symbol • By the 1700s penmanship schools began opening their doors • In the mid-1800s an abolitionist and bookkeeper named Platt Rogers Spencer attempted to democratize penmanship by formulating a cursive writing system, known as the Spencerian method

  6. History of Cursive • Austin Norman Palmer replaced the Spencerian method in American classrooms, where students learned to form loopy characters between horizontal lines on chalkboards • D’Nealian script originated in the 1970s and was designed to ease the transition from printing to cursive writing • Another style, developed by Charles Zaner and Elmer Bloser for elementary-aged children, dominated textbooks for much of the 20th century • Schools began to eliminate penmanship classes, and by the 1980s many U.S. children received little formal training

  7. So Why Cursive? • Improves the ability to read it • Improves writing speed and skills • Improves sensory and fine motor skills • Connects people with the past • Improves the ability to retain information

  8. HandAnatomy101

  9. Quick Facts • The hand is made up of… • 27 bones • 29 joints • 34 muscles • 123 ligaments • 3 main nerves • 45 nerve branches • 30 arteries

  10. The Anatomy of the Hand

  11. The Anatomy of the Forearm

  12. Stabilization & Skill Skill Side of Hand (Radial and Median Nerves) Stabilization Side of Hand (Median and Ulnar Nerves)

  13. Nerve Innervations of the Hand https://www.orthobullets.com/hand/6008/physical-exam-of-the-hand

  14. Grasping Patterns

  15. Hand Strength is Key!

  16. Cursive Basics

  17. The Handwriting Pyramid

  18. When to Begin Cursive • Formal Instruction in 3rd Grade • Can be taught in 2nd with focus on easy letters/connections • Student has difficulty mastering print writing • Cursive instruction should not proceed if student can’t master pre-cursive exercises

  19. Pre-Cursive Exercises • Under to Over - a d g o p • Up and Down Retrace - i t u p h k • Up and Down Loop - b f l • Descending Loop - g j y

  20. Eight Key Components • Memory • Connections • Placement • Size • Start • Sequence • Control • Spacing * Speed

  21. 4 Basic Connections • Baseline Connections • Easy: baseline to baseline he • Tricky: baseline to high ca • High Connections • Easy: high to high ou • Tricky: high to low or

  22. Remember Who’s Boss • Teaching connections using only two letters • Write letters separately then connected • The ending of the first letter can NEVER change • The first letter is the BOSS • Second letter changes its start

  23. The Instructional Stages • Stage 1: Imitation • Student watches then imitates • Stage 2: Copying • Student looks at prompt then copies • Stage 3: Independent Writing • Student writes without prompt or model

  24. Cursive Teaching Order

  25. Developmental Teaching Order • Lowercase then Capitals • Start with familiar letters • Mastery of the “c” stroke • Easier to more difficult connections • Similar formation patterns

  26. Lowercase: Magic “C” c a d g

  27. Lowercase: Familiar Letters h t p

  28. Lowercase: Similar to e e l f

  29. Lowercase: Recognizable Letters u y i j

  30. Lowercase: Common but Unfamiliar k r s

  31. Lowercase: Tow Truck Letters o w b v

  32. Lowercase: m & n m n

  33. Lowercase: Infrequent & Challenging x z q

  34. Capital: Same as Lowercase A C O U V W X Y Z

  35. Capital: Ready, Set, Up & Over P B R N M

  36. Capital: Ready & Set H K T J

  37. Capital: Difficult Formations I J D L

  38. Capital: Unique Instruction G S E

  39. Capital: The Problem with “Q” Q

  40. Multisensory Lessons

  41. Wet Dry Try Write prompt with chalk Student traces with wet sponge Student dries with dry paper Student tries with small chalk piece Addresses sensory-motor skills and tripod grasp development

  42. Imaginary Writing • Air Writing • When reviewing letters/numbers, trace with pencil in the air • Follow the Ball • Similar to air writing, but with teacher and students holding balls • Laser Letters • Have students write along with laser tracing prompt • Have students use laser pointer to trace along prompt

  43. Connection Inspection • Write words on board • cursive = easy • print = hard • Divide class into teams • One student is the inspector • Have teams solve word problems by becoming letters and “connecting” • REMEMBER WHO’S BOSS!!!

  44. Voices • Verbal instruction can get boring • Switch it up by using voices • loud, soft, squeaky, high, low • Allow students to lead using their own fun voices • Great instruction for verbal learners

  45. Mystery Letters • Teaches correct letter formation • Students start letter, then wait for instruction • Magic “C” Letters • “Magic c, wait. Turn it into ______” • Magic “C” Words • “Magic c, wait. Add the letter ______” • Other Lowercase Letters • “Start at the dot, wait. Turn it into _____. Add the letter ________”

  46. Letter Stories • “Inside “g” lives a little man named George” • “’i’ and ‘t’ should be closed. If they are open a bear could get in our tent!” • “If ‘m’ has big gaps, they will fill up with trash when the garbage truck comes.” • “The cursive ‘n’ has two humps, so let’s turn it into a nose” • “The letter ‘q’ is followed by ‘u’, so let’s add it to the tail” • “When you make ‘s’, start with a jet takeoff!”

  47. Q & A www.TheOTDad.com www.facebook.com/theotdad www.pinterest.com/theotdad www.youtube.com/theotdad

More Related