Research tells Why cursive handwriting is good for your brain.
Composing by hand enables the cerebrum to learn and recall better, an EEG study finds. As young kids progressively depend exclusively on computerized gadgets for distant and in-class learning, numerous K-12 educational systems around the globe are eliminating cursive penmanship and no longer command that children figure out how to write in longhand content. Depending entirely on a console to get familiar with the letters in order and type out composed words could be dangerous; collecting proof proposes that not learning cursive penmanship may ruin the cerebrum's ideal potential to learn and recollect. Another EEG-based examination by scientists at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) reaffirms the significance of "antiquated" cursive penmanship in the 21st-century's Computer Age. Regardless of whether understudies utilize computerized pens and compose by hand on an intelligent PC screen, cursive penmanship enables the mind to learn and recollect...