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The Relationship Between Handwriting Style and Speed and Legibility
131
Citations
16
References
1998
Year
Cognitive ScienceOrthographyMixed StyleNeurolinguisticsHandwritingWriting AssessmentEducationPsycholinguisticsCursive LettersLanguage StudiesCopying TaskExperimental PsychologyCharacter RecognitionGraphologyWriting SkillsSocial SciencesEnglish Writing
Abstract The relationship between handwriting style and handwriting speed and legibility was investigated. Three samples of writing (narrative, expository, and copying) were collected from 600 students in Grades 4-9. The copying task provided a measure of handwriting speed, and all 3 writing samples were scored for handwriting style (manuscript, cursive, mixed-mostly manuscript, and mixed-mostly cursive) and legibility. The handwriting of students who used a mixed style was faster than the handwriting of the students who used either manuscript or cursive exclusively. In addition, papers written with mixed-mostly cursive letters generally received higher ratings for legibility than papers written with the other 3 styles did. There were no differences between manuscript and cursive in terms of legibility or speed.
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