“Handwriting was initially the first means of preserving information that was previously only passed down orally,” explains Donica. Before the invention of the printing press, copying information or ...
Nearly every aspect of the 1996 murder of JonBenét Ramsey has baffled investigators for two decades, but one of the most enduring question marks in the case is the bizarre ransom note found in the ...
If you've ever looked down at your notebooks full of chicken scratch and wondered why you're writing is so darn sloppy, you'll probably be pretty interested to learn that your handwriting can reveal a ...
Jan. 23 is National Handwriting Day — a great excuse to put away your smartphone and explore the lost art of penmanship. What does your handwriting say about you? Graphology, the science of analyzing ...
Many movie or TV plots often have a climax where they catch the bad guy, using nothing more than handwriting comparison. But does your handwriting actually reveal things about you? The art of studying ...
Research reveals that handwriting is more than just putting pen to paper, and that it may be a secret mirror of our personalities. In a world increasingly dominated by digital communication, the art ...
Semi-ambidextrous Nicholas Cronquist rebelled against third-grade cursive lessons. “I remember I hated it and I told my teacher I thought it was dumb,” he says. Cronquist, now 26, eventually learned ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. I never liked writing by hand. Growing up, I envied the girls in my class whose squeezably round printed letters strung together ...
University of Canberra provides funding as a member of The Conversation AU. Handwriting is dead, long live keyboard skills! So says the Finnish education system. From 2016 handwriting will no longer ...
CNET contributor Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has covered everything from HDTVs to computers to Flowbee Haircut Systems. Besides his work with CNET, Don's work has been featured in a ...
P.J. Schwartz lives the life of a quintessential golden child. The Ridgewood fifth-grader is a straight-A student. He’s mature beyond his 11 years. He looks out for his two younger siblings and always ...