Vengo dalla Francia e qui a scuola usiamo un tipo specifico di carta con le righe come mostrato nell’immagine (non solo per imparare a scrivere ma in generale anche per scrivere gli appunti delle lezioni all’università). A tutti i bambini viene insegnato a scrivere in corsivo usando queste righe esattamente come in questa immagine. So che non funziona allo stesso modo in altri paesi, quindi mi chiedo come sia in Germania.

https://i.redd.it/0fbfkyv47zuf1.png

di mikroonde

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3 commenti

  1. pizzamann2472 on

    I don’t know how it is done today (I heard that some schools skip cursive completely nowadays, but don’t know if it is true). When I was in primary school 20 years ago, it worked like this:

    In first grade, we learned to write in block letters using a pencil, first by just tracing the letters on templates and then writing on paper sheets with ruler lines, called “Lineatur 1” (you can just google the term to see what they look like). They have 4 ruler lines per line of text to make it easier to place the characters.

    In second grade, we learned & switched to cursive with a pencil on “Lineatur 2” sheets. They look very similar to Lineatur 1, only difference is that they are a bit smaller, so more text lines fit on one sheet.

    In third grade, we switched to an ink pen and sheets with “Lineatur 3”. Lineatur 3 has 2 ruler lines per line of text, so there is still some guidance on where to place characters but less than in the grades before.

    In fourth grade, we switched to “Lineatur 4”. Lineatur 4 has only one ruler line per line of text, so no additional guidance anymore.

    Later on, after primary school, there usually weren’t strict rules about which paper to use for notes or how to write. Most people eventually settled with “Lineatur 28” for everything, which is just a sheet with squares, and adopted a writing style that is a mix between block letters and cursive.

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