While waiting for my shift to be over this morning, I took a look at one of the newspapers that were delivered, and found an interesting article.
From USA Today [http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/story/2011-08-30/China-brushing-up-on-the-lost-fine-art-of-calligraphy/50197474/1]:
On a side note, I was also thinking "When will the first shift people get here?", but that's another story.
So, I thought to bring this matter here to you, fellow Escapists. What are your thoughts on the article? What's your stance on handwriting/typing? Should schools still teach handwriting, if only to keep a part of our respective national histories alive? Post your thoughts and discuss here.
EDIT: It appears that I haven't quite said my stance. It's similar to a lot of what's already been said, to be honest, though I DO wish it was taught a bit better over the course of a few more years. The last little bit of handwriting lessons I had, for example, was in third grade. You can likely imagine the result there (still legible, but more scratchy than anything).
From USA Today [http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/story/2011-08-30/China-brushing-up-on-the-lost-fine-art-of-calligraphy/50197474/1]:
This got me thinking. Are other nations already further down this road? Will all of us eventually abandon our own handwriting and begin to just use keyboards, typing our stories until the end?BEIJING - Li Qixuan enjoys shooting pool, drawing cartoons and chatting with friends on his computer. But the fine art of calligraphy?
"I don't like it, and most of my classmates don't like it, because it's very boring," complains Li, 11, who takes two calligraphy classes a week at his school.
Come Thursday, the start of fall semester, students nationwide will have no choice but to learn the art of elegant brush strokes. China's Ministry of Education has ordered elementary schools to hold a weekly calligraphy class for grades 3 to 6. High schools, too, must offer optional lessons and after-school activities related to calligraphy.
In the USA, most public schools have de-emphasized handwriting as students spend more time working on computer keyboards. In China, increased use of computers and cellphone texting has weakened students' ability to write Chinese characters by hand, says the ministry.
Besides delivering better writing technique, calligraphy lessons also will "nurture patriotic feelings" among the young, and "improve the national quality," the ministry said.
"Chinese kids should have more classes like calligraphy to teach our traditional culture," says Li's father, Li Po. "I think Western culture is too strong in China now."
Adults also are increasingly forgetting how to write certain characters, worries calligraphy master and educator Ma Tiankuo, based in the tradition-rich city of Xian. "I feel a strong sense of crisis."
But some Chinese say schools do not have the funds to train and supply calligraphy teachers.
"There are still many village schools that don't have enough teachers for the main courses," says Geng Shulong, an elementary school teacher in Dingxing county, Hebei province.
His daughter Geng Ruohan, 8, says she'd like to try calligraphy on one condition: It must not increase homework that already takes her four hours a night.
Contributing: Sunny Yang
By Calum MacLeod
On a side note, I was also thinking "When will the first shift people get here?", but that's another story.
So, I thought to bring this matter here to you, fellow Escapists. What are your thoughts on the article? What's your stance on handwriting/typing? Should schools still teach handwriting, if only to keep a part of our respective national histories alive? Post your thoughts and discuss here.
EDIT: It appears that I haven't quite said my stance. It's similar to a lot of what's already been said, to be honest, though I DO wish it was taught a bit better over the course of a few more years. The last little bit of handwriting lessons I had, for example, was in third grade. You can likely imagine the result there (still legible, but more scratchy than anything).