justin.framedl.eth
@ahn.eth
attended back to school for the 5-year-old - met teacher, learned about curriculum, saw other parents teacher explained how major academic goal is to get basics for reading & writing in place before stating a big focus will be cursive writing to which i unwisely chuckled never in my adult life have i gotten such a glare from another adult π
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Chicago π©
@chicago
Cursive? Is this a private school? π Or is this just how French schools operate?
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Arjan | That Poetry Guy
@arjantupan
It is very French. This is the way they learn how to write in France. It's interesting.
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patxol π· anser.social
@patxol.eth
It's not just interesting, it's beautiful ! Words in a fancy dress.
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justin.framedl.eth
@ahn.eth
"words in a fancy dress" very demure, very french π€
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patxol π· anser.social
@patxol.eth
From a French perspective, that drama around cursive is very funny. Learning cursive is just a basic thing, that just requires a good eye-hand coordination. It's very good for motor skills and it pays respect to words :-) My French-British 5 yo is massively excited about learning how to write "attachΓ©". I have no doubt she will master that as well as dactylography.
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Chicago π©
@chicago
From the American perspective (especially as a public educator for 9 years), public schools in the USA no longer teach cursive because it interferes with teaching to the test because nearly every single grade of children have to take tests to pass. Honestly, I don't believe they teach any penmanship; as long as it kind of looks correct, that's acceptable. A lot of school post covid are actually reliant on kids to type everything. Oh, kids also don't learn touch typing either.
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