Script is finding new life in after-school clubs where students can learn to loop and swoosh their handwriting.
Discover how a school is bringing cursive writing back into the classroom with a fun and engaging after-school club, helping preteens embrace the art of penmanship in today's digital age.
Indiana legislators have been filing bills for the 2026 legislative session, which begins again Monday, and some of the bills ...
The staff of the Martha Canfield Memorial Free Library invites the public to an in-person talk with Tim Brookes, author of ...
A postal clerk who can’t read cursive, millions of misread letters and a “lost generation” of students: Michael Reagan links ...
Here’s a true story starring the U.S. Postal Service and Santa Claus. Shortly before Christmas, my wife, Colleen, went to our ...
Writing things down isn't so common in the digital age we live in, but science shows there are major advantages to doing so.
Bea Hines recounts how the Herald hired her 60 years ago and how she would become the paper’s first Black female reporter.
In the 60-year-old’s pre-game interview with Claudia, the child liaison officer shared her wish to be a Traitor, saying: ...
Boomers still remember the proud feeling of a perfectly written line on a chalkboard and the triumphant moment of erasing a ...
As Illinois rolls out a new law requiring early literacy screenings beginning Jan. 1, some educators question whether it will ...
The Bulletin’s Mike Cosper sat down with historian and author Christine Rosen to talk about this tension between the life we ...