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Episode: 2061
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Title: HPR2061: Handwriting
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2061/hpr2061.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 13:50:04
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---
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This is HPR episode 2.61 entitled Handwriting.
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It is hosted by ROOP and is about 7 minutes long.
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The summary is, ROOPs argue why people should use Handwriting to gain superpowers.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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This is ROOPs and this is Hacker Public Radio.
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Yesterday, I listened to an episode of Freakonomics and it was on Handwriting.
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And as a child, I disliked pitmanship and I was horrible at it.
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Everything was bad and eventually my teachers just told me to print
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so that they could read the answers that I put on the paper.
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And now I understand this is a tech show and it should have an audience that
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leans toward the fact that computers are awesome.
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But most of you, fine listeners, should be interested in what is the best
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solution to a problem, especially if it's contrary to conventional thought.
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So many reasons were given in this episode of Freakonomics for Handwriting
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to be a thing of the past and I think most of them are just a lot of bull.
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First, some more qualifications about me.
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I'm a college dropout that I did eventually graduate and until last week I was a teacher
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who worked with students who were not always the best.
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And I've been without a cell phone for a couple years and I love fountain pens.
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All right, so this probably doesn't qualify me for much as I'm certainly not a doctor
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or a scientific researcher, but I do have some real-world experiences and I have
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been experimenting on my students and all of that, of course, in a good way.
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So here are some of the cons that were brought up.
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And Handwriting is old-fashioned. It's true.
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Typing's faster. This is also true. Curse of you go about 30 words per minute on average.
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And people's hands hurt when they're bright with a pen. And this is true too.
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And lack of success as a child,
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demotivated people, school damaged them. This also could be true.
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And these are all excuses I've made myself and they're all excuses my students have made to me.
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Now I'm a computer science teacher and I require all of my students to keep a handwritten
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notebook in all of my classes. They can use this notebook on all of their tests
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and all their quizzes and their assignments. And of course, if you ask them, I'm obviously
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an old-fashioned stick in the mud, but they don't use those words.
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Now there's nothing wrong with using tech to help with anything, but if you don't understand
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concepts of why and how all the tech in the world is not going to help you. And many people will
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try to use tech as a crutch. Now typing is faster. Totally true. Most students can get to the point
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where they can type everything that is said in a lecture. Now this skips a very crucial part
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of the learning process where you have to use your brain to analyze what is being said.
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If I'm just writing everything someone says, maybe I'm not thinking about it as hard,
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is if I'm listening to what they say and putting it back in my own words.
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Now writing is slower and that forces you to take the content and put it into your own words.
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Think about it. And this is called being an active listener.
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Now the pain in your hand should go away with practice and good form and having the proper tools.
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As I said, I love fountain pens and they glide over the paper. And you don't have to hold home
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with the death grip that you have to hold a roller ball. And form means to use your arm
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not your wrist when you write. And with practice this can be done. I can sit with my fountain pens
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and I can take all kinds of notes all day long. It's wonderful.
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Now as a child I was very bad at handwriting and if you look at my handwriting now I'm still very bad at it.
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But my teacher was really wrong to tell me to stop. Part of education is to teach about failure
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and difficulty. If people only do easy things who would do all the hard things. A person they
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interviewed on Freakonomics said that their child's school put too much emphasis on handwriting
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and they moved their child to another school as this was having too much of a negative effect on
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his feelings. So way to teach your child to run away from hard things that'll I'm sure
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prove to great success in his life. And I hope that no college professor ever hurts his little
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feelings or requires too much from him. Life gets harder. Education should be hard and that's
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to prepare students for this work of life. Sorry I have lots of opinions on this. So enough
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cons about it. How about some of some pro-argument for handwriting. So laptops are full of distractions
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and most adults I know can't keep focus with all their email and their social media trying to
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grab their attention. Man I'm very ADHD and laptops kill my focus. So in an independent study
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they talked about on Freakonomics. Two researchers found that handwriters and laptoppers,
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I just coined a word, had no difference in learning facts. So the sky is blue,
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dogs like to chase cats, things like that. That's where my mind goes when I think of facts.
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And there was no difference unless they were allowed to review their notes before the quiz.
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Handwriters then gained an edge. It's almost like they thought of what they wrote and then they
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were able to read it and learn something as compared to typing something while someone's talking
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and then reading it for the first time. So concepts on the other hand, handwriters always held
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an advantage. It's almost like they were thinking about the concepts more than the students who
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were just typing everything that was said. So something not really covered was writing new content.
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I give my students Fountain Pens as rewards and this makes writing so much more special. They take
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more time to write things, they take more time to think about what they're trying to say. It's a win-win.
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Now everyone is different. Of course, but I want you to please try handwriting for a few weeks
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and see if it helps you retain more. If you're not a student, watch a lecture on the
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on the internet or read a book and see if you can learn more and thank more. Now finally,
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handwriting is personal and as I said on Frekenomics, it's a new thing as a handwriting used to just
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be a way to give receipts or jot down things up. But I'm willing to mail a postcard to almost
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anyone like if you live very far away, it's going to cost me a lot of stamps. Please don't. But maybe
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you should. If you're in the United States, I'll totally send you a postcard and if you
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all get to just send me your address to troops in Gmail and so that you can get a feel for that
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personal touch. So I've made some arguments. Handwriting is making you smarter. You know,
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it helps you develop grit. It makes you feel special. It gives you superpowers.
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Hopefully you will try this out. So this has been Drupes and this is Hacker Public Radio,
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HBR and there will be fountain pen recommendations in the show notes.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org. We are a community podcast
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network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows,
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was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast
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and click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was found
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by the digital dog pound and the infonomican computer club and it's part of the binary revolution
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at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a
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comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status,
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today's show is released on the create of comments, attribution, share a light 3.0 license.
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