Palmer Method

The Palmer Method of penmanship instruction was promoted by Austin Palmer in the early 1900's and soon became the most popular handwriting system in the United States. Under it, students were taught to copy a uniform style of cursive writing with rhythmic motions. Left-handers were usually made to use their right hands. Palmer's style fell out of popularity and was replaced by a movement to teach children manuscript before teaching them cursive, in order to provide them with a means of written expression as soon as possible and thus develop writing skills. Students would switch to cursive later on. This effectively reduced the emphasis on handwriting in elementary school and is sometimes said to have been responsible for a decrease in the overall legibility of modern American handwriting.

Reference

*Thornton, Tamara Plakins. Handwriting in America. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1996. ISBN 0-30-006477-2

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
alkoxy group
hustler
missus dominicus
university of salford
karelian language
quintus fufius calenus
veps language
1 up
cold comfort farm
chaos engine
richard joseph
item
joseph hill
chante jawan mallard
the boomtown rats
gregory biggs
functional
windshield
nizam peerwani
lori berenson
household words
in joke
superstructure
minimal polynomial
henri vieuxtemps
melodrama
novotny
agar plate
gentamicin
jeffrey shaara
ertapenem
operation scavenger
combination (chess)
foxton
baldwin ii of jerusalem
rachel true
pricing objectives
variety
human being (album)
seal (2003 album)
variety (magazine)
frequent flyer program
american southwest conference
first class