In an age when most students can type faster than they can write, it’s easy to wonder whether learning handwriting and cursive is still relevant. Yet a growing body of neuroscience suggests these «old-fashioned» skills are anything but obsolete. Writing by hand activates neurons and varying areas of the brain in ways that typing simply does not.
When a student writes by hand, sensory, motor, and cognitive regions of the brain work together and activate far more neural pathways than typing, leading to deeper learning and stronger memory formation.
You can read the entire article in Essentials in Education
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