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Smith, Peter – Reading Teacher, 1987
Responds to Karl Koenke's article on handwriting in the November 1986 issue of "The Reading Teacher" and offers an alternative opinion on handwriting instruction based on instruction methods in the United Kingdom. (JC)
Descriptors: Cursive Writing, Foreign Countries, Handwriting, Printing
Sachs, Judyth; Logan, Lloyd – 1985
Questionnaires were sent to 2,161 teachers and to administrators in 118 primary schools in the Brisbane North Region (Australia) to determine their attitudes toward the implementation of a new handwriting syllabus. The questionnaire also solicited information on educational experience, the importance of handwriting, the teaching of handwriting,…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Curriculum Development, Cursive Writing, Educational Change
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Alston, Jean – British Journal of Special Education, 1991
This paper examines the complexity of teaching handwriting to meet the requirements of Great Britain's National Curriculum. Three major questions are considered: (1) what should be taught? (2) what are the teaching objectives? and (3) how will pupil progress be assessed? (JDD)
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Course Content, Curriculum, Cursive Writing
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Jarman, Christopher – British Journal of Special Education, 1990
Great Britain's National Curriculum places insufficient emphasis on handwriting instruction, and its suggestion to begin joined-up writing in Level 3 is inappropriate. A historical perspective on variations in handwriting style leads to a recommendation for a simple joined style, which would be based on the skeletal italic and taught by example.…
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Course Content, Cursive Writing, Educational History
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Meulenbroek, Ruud G. J.; Van Galen, Gerard P. – Journal of Experimental Education, 1990
Seventy-five Dutch elementary school students wrote letters of a cursive alphabet after presentation of printed and cursive letters. Analysis revealed that spatial ambiguity, allographic variability, contextual ambiguity, and letter frequency are determinants of the time needed by children for perceiving printed and producing corresponding cursive…
Descriptors: Children, Context Effect, Cursive Writing, Elementary Education