Have any of you heard about Cursive Logic??
From their website:
Letters grouped by shape ― Four foundational shapes underlie the entire lowercase alphabet. Rather
than teaching the letters alphabetically, CursiveLogic groups the
lowercase alphabet into four groups based on the shape of the initial
stroke of the letters and teaches all of the similarly-shaped letters in
a single lesson. Letters are also taught in a specific order that
reinforces the pattern. By teaching all of the similar letters
together, CursiveLogic captures the natural synergy of the alphabet
itself, allowing each letter in the series to reinforce the proper
formation of all the others.
Letter strings ― CursiveLogic captures the flow of cursive by teaching all of the similarly shaped letters in a connected string rather than as individual
letters. CursiveLogic’s letter strings teach students to connect
letters from the first lesson, allowing students to internalize the flow
of cursive handwriting even before they have learned all 26 letters.
CursiveLogic also uses visual and auditory cues to reinforce the shape patterns:
Theme colors
— Each shape string has a color—orange ovals, lime loops, silver
swings, and mauve mounds—that reinforces the formation of the basic
common shape.
Verbal task analysis
— Students learn a simple, rhythmical chant that describes the path of
the writing instrument as the letter shapes are formed. The process of
verbally describing a motor task while performing it aids the
acquisition of new motor skills.
And
CurisiveLogic is fun! Students young and old love tracing and writing
our shape strings. CursiveLogic is the only handwriting curriculum that
has an “element of fun” that comes from the alphabet itself. No
cartoon characters, songs, or gimmicks needed!
From ME: I have ordered this as a backer on Kickstarter. I also received another copy in a early review that I submitted to Kaylee's second grade teacher. We have all come to the conclusion this is a great way to learn cursive handwriting.
There is much discussion lately on the importance of hand writting and cognition. There is a great TED talk from Jake Weidmann
If you have ever thought about teaching your youngin' to scrawl on a sheet of paper - give this a go.
D
A timely, relevant post. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThe formality of cursive writing was used in professional correspondence before the development of the typewriter in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Cursive connected words in a single stroke are quite distinctive from "printing" or block lettering.https://mycursive.com/
ReplyDelete