KC parents, educators push back on Missouri bill requiring cursive be taught in school
Lisa Meinen-Doerksen, a mother of two children at Border Star Montessori in Brookside, said she likes cursive writing. She believes it has helped her children's fine motor skills and their ability to write from left to right.
However, when she thinks about public education, teaching her children cursive writing is not at the top of her list.
'It's a good mental exercise,' Meinen-Doerksen said, 'but I don't believe they will be using cursive in their lives.'
Yet, several Missouri Republican lawmakers are again pushing to pass bills that would require cursive handwriting to be taught in Missouri public schools.
Missouri State Reps. Peggy McGaugh of Carrollton, and Renee Reuter of Imperial along with Missouri State Sen. Curtis Trent, who represents the Springfield area, have sponsored bills that call for the requirement during this legislative session.
The benefits, they've highlighted, include brain stimulation, improved academic performance and help for children with dyslexia and dysgraphia.
But adding cursive to the curriculum has been no easy feat. Former Rep. Gretchen Bangert, a Florissant Democrat, carried the bill for seven years without success before McGaugh picked it up.
The bill was put onto other bills, Bangert said, which was one of the reasons why it failed. But even when a couple of those bills made it through, the cursive requirement wasn't included.
'It was on an education bill, two of them, and then it was ripped off in the Senate for some reason,' Bangert said. 'I don't know why. I couldn't get an answer from the Senators as to why they took it off.'
In Missouri, Republicans and Democrats have supported cursive bills, proving it to be a bipartisan issue. However, although teaching cursive has garnered support from both sides, bills making it a teaching requirement have yet to be pushed through the finish line.
David Price, president of the Kansas City Federation of Teachers, said that currently, Kansas City Public Schools does not require its schools to teach cursive as part of their curriculum. While he did teach it to his class at Benjamin Banneker Elementary, it wasn't something he focused on.
'I taught third grade, so I would introduce cursive toward the end of the year as just kind of a fun extra thing,' Price said. 'But it was not a part of our curriculum.'
Nationwide, the number of schools teaching cursive has grown.
During the mid-2010s, most states adopted the Common Core State Standards, which did not explicitly require teaching cursive but emphasized keyboarding. Around 10 years ago, only 14 states required schools to teach cursive. Last year, Kentucky became the 24th state to require cursive to be taught.
One of the biggest arguments for requiring cursive is so children can read historic documents, which are penned in cursive, Trent said.
'Cursive writing is a key part of literacy, of being able to access many historic and original sources that were written in cursive,' he said. 'I think it's a very effective way to take notes and do the kind of day-to-day writing that one has to do to function in many professions.'
But Price, whose union opposes the bills, said that while he sees the benefits of teaching cursive, there aren't strong enough arguments to support it.
'I know the biggest issue is that someone doesn't know how to sign their name, and the old tell-tale of 'they can't read the founding documents' and things like that,' Price said. 'I think nowadays, that's becoming less and less of a worry. You can find the Constitution and the Bill of Rights in print.'
Price said cursive used to be important when all communication relied upon handwriting everything. But that isn't how the world works anymore.
'In those days, you had to be able to write,' Price said. 'If you had a thirty-page paper, you had to handwrite thirty pages. The only form of communication was handwriting. And, now, that's become less, and there are very few people nowadays who do handwritten anything.'
While Bangert's bill highlighted that there would be no fiscal impact on the education department if the bill passed, Price said there are still a few downsides to taking on mandatory cursive.
He said his union opposes the bills because of the additional testing.
'It doesn't benefit everyone the same way,' Price said, 'and could be a detriment to someone who is behind in their reading development or is struggling with certain aspects of language.'
Montessori schools typically teach cursive before print, according to Montessori For Today, which is why Meinen-Doerksen's children learned to read and write in it. However, Meinen-Doerksen disagrees with the idea that learning cursive is necessary as technology becomes a bigger part of children's lives.
'Most likely, elementary school children today will not need to write checks or sign documents,' she said. 'They will not need to pen letters. All of that will be done electronically.'
But Trent disagrees. While technology can be helpful, he said students should not take it for granted.
'Technology is a tool,' Trent said. 'It shouldn't replace knowledge or capability in a person. It should supplement the knowledge and capability people naturally develop.'
Much of the focus on teaching cursive is related to understanding and conserving the past, but Meinen-Doerksen said she doesn't believe that is enough of a reason for children to learn it now.
'Teaching cursive to children simply because that's what you learned is like older generations telling me I needed to learn shorthand if I wanted to go into the office world,' she said. 'I think that's a weak argument.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
30 minutes ago
- The Hill
Raskin takes swipe at Trump over price of military parade, GOP megabill
Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) slammed President Trump for his Saturday military parade, which is expected to cost millions of dollars. 'As tanks roll down PA. Ave and planes streak above, remember this is all courtesy of the taxpayers,' Raskin wrote in a post on the social media platform X. 'Maybe there will be goodie bags for 14 million people who used to have Medicaid,' he added, referencing Medicaid cuts in the president's spending bill. The celebratory event held in honor of the Army's 250th birthday also coincides with the president's 79th birthday. The parade plans, which feature the public display of tanks and weapons from World War II, are expected to cost between $25 million and $45 million, according to the Army. 'It's a surprise party! Most people's spouse or family pay for theirs, but—surprise!—you're paying for Donald Trump's $45 million 79th birthday military parade,' Raskin wrote on Saturday. For months, Raskin and other Democrats have rebuked the Trump administration for the House-approved GOP spending bill that would add $2.4 trillion to the national debt while locking out some Medicaid recipients with new work requirements. Republicans have lauded the bill for its extensions to Trump's 2017 tax cuts and $1,000-per-baby investment accounts . The president has suggested that tariffs will mitigate a significant rise in the national debt while encouraging patrons to honor the country's history of servicemembers in the Army during the military parade hosted on Flag Day. 'OUR GREAT MILITARY PARADE IS ON, RAIN OR SHINE. REMEMBER, A RAINY DAY PARADE BRINGS GOOD LUCK. I'LL SEE YOU ALL IN D.C.' Trump wrote in a Saturday Truth Social post. Sixty-four percent of Americans disapprove of the use of state funds for this weekend's military parade, according to results from a NBC Decision Desk Poll.


Los Angeles Times
39 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Former Minnesota House speaker and husband killed in politically motivated shooting, Gov. Walz says
CHAMPLIN, Minn. — Former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband were killed Saturday in a politically motivated shooting, Gov. Tim Walz said. A second state legislator and his wife were wounded in a separate attack. Both targeted lawmakers are Democrats. Officials say the suspect in the shootings was still at large. Mayor Ryan Sabas of the town of Champlin earlier announced that state Sen. John Hoffman and state Rep. Hortman had been shot, and that Hoffman's wife was also shot. Walz and other authorities said at a news conference that the assailant was posing as a law enforcement officer. Investigators were working to establish motive for the attacks, officials said. Walz said the shootings were targeted. Hortman was the top House Democratic leader in the state Legislature and a former House speaker. She was first elected in 2004. Hortman, a lawyer, was married with two children. Hoffman, also Democrat, was first elected in 2012. He runs Hoffman Strategic Advisors, a consulting firm. He previously served as vice chair of the Anoka Hennepin School Board, which manages the largest school district in Minnesota. Hoffman is married and has one daughter. Both Hoffman and Hortman represent districts located north of Minneapolis. The shootings happened at a time when political leaders nationwide have been attacked, harassed and intimidated during a time of deep political divisions. Former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, leader of Giffords, a national gun violence prevention group, said in a statement: 'I am horrified and heartbroken by last night's attack on two patriotic public servants. My family and I know the horror of a targeted shooting all too well. An attack against lawmakers is an attack on American democracy itself. Leaders must speak out and condemn the fomenting violent extremism that threatens everything this country stands for.' Giffords was shot in the head in 2011 by a gunman who killed six people and injured 12 others. She stepped down from Congress in January 2012 to focus on her recovery.

Wall Street Journal
42 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
Two Democratic Minnesota Lawmakers Shot, One Fatally
Two Minnesota Democratic lawmakers were shot early Saturday, one of them fatally. State Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband were fatally shot in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, Gov. Tim Walz said Saturday.