New Jersey's public schools must by law teach students how to write cursive legibly and become fluent in reading it.
Cursive is making a comeback in New Jersey next fall! On Monday, Jan. 19, Gov. Phil Murphy signed a new state law that ...
Beginning in September, New Jersey public schools must teach cursive writing to students in grades three to five under a law ...
Print is dead. New Jersey is flipping the script and ordering its public schools to bring back cursive writing starting next ...
In one of his final acts in office, Gov. Philip D. Murphy signed a bill on Monday requiring third, fourth and fifth graders ...
Cursive writing may have been replaced by emails, texting, DM's and emojis, but not all educators are nixing handwriting lessons inside classrooms — and there are crucial reasons why. The flowing ...
New Jersey public school students in the third, fourth and fifth grades will be taught cursive writing. That proposal was ...
Governor Phil Murphy has signed legislation requiring the return of cursive handwriting instruction in New Jersey’s public ...
Starting next school year, New Jersey elementary students will once again learn cursive writing, a move inspired by research ...
An Indiana Department of Education report due this Friday may add fuel to the debate for the return of compulsory cursive writing instruction at Hoosier public and charter elementary schools. Or, it ...
Since Missouri does not require cursive writing education, one of our viewers wants to know: Is cursive writing dying?
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