The end of cursive writing

Seattle Times (from Minneapolis Star Tribune): In age of computers, is cursive writing cursed?

Under pressure to meet testing standards, teachers are devoting less time to penmanship practice. A 2003 survey of primary teachers by Vanderbilt University found that the average classroom gets fewer than 10 minutes a day of penmanship instruction.

While scholars and historians may bemoan the loss of handwritten letters and documents, a leading writing expert says that communication is more important than the form of writing. Kids who have trouble learning cursive might shy away from writing altogether, said Steve Graham, a professor at Vanderbilt University and author of the study on penmanship instruction.

One teacher says cursive is important: She said that learning cursive helps develop fine motor skills. She also believes that proficient cursive writers can express their thoughts more quickly and completely, and there’s some evidence to back her up: The students who wrote their SAT essays in cursive scored slightly higher than those who didn’t. Tip: Buzzworthy by Brian Chin, who still writes often in cursive

“Super-rich” numbers grow in 2006

Yahoo (Reuters): Super-rich population surges in 2006: survey. The number of U.S. households with a net worth of more than $5 million, excluding their primary residence, surged 23 percent to surpass one million for the first time in 2006, according to a survey released on Tuesday.

The survey (by Spectrem Group in Chicago) found that U.S. households that are merely wealthy, defined as having assets of more than $500,000 excluding primary residence, rose 9 percent to 15.3 million in 2006 from the year before.

Also PR Newswire:
U.S. Households Worth $5 Million or More Exceed 1 Million for First Time Ever

You’ll never hear web site readers say …

Lost Remote: Things News Website Visitors Never, Ever Say (The Remix)

Steve Safran, managing editor of Lost Remote, put together a list his and others comments on quirky things on TV station web sites:

“I like how I can get the marketing information, the sales information, advertorials, automotive, real estate, dating, coupons, information about upcoming sweeps stories and 40 other items all on the station’s front page. Also, I believe there is news here.”

“It’s really cool how your homepage is like, 5 pages long! Sweet!”

“I worry that non-news pages will dilute this station’s brand.”

“Some people assume if the story is at the top of your page is new, but not me, so I like it when you add the “new” button to the end of the headline to tell me the story is new.”

“It’s cool how that information I want is only three clicks deep.”

“I hope they brought marketing in to the meetings about this site.”

“More flashing ads for mortgages!”

“The anchors’ heads at the top of your site reminds me of Mount Rushmore. It calms me and makes me want to watch the newscast.”

“Yes, I will make you my homepage because I like to get my information from just one source.”

“Forcing me to register makes me feel like I’m part of something bigger. Thank you for allowing me to become a valued member.”

“I love how this looks just like all the other sites in town. Distinction disturbs me.”

“Navigation on the top AND the side! I feel like Magellan!”

“I like how the embedded videos on your homepage start up with the audio louder than the landing pattern at the airport. So does the guy in the cubicle three desks away from me.”

$25K is the average amount for retirement savings

CNN: Have less than $25K in savings? Get in line: A new survey finds you’re in good company with colleagues of all ages when it comes to saving for retirement.

Nearly half of all workers saving for retirement have savings that fall short of the $25,000 mark, according to the 2007 Retirement Confidence Survey by the Employee Benefit Research Institute and Matthew Greenwald & Associates.
Predictably, the youngest workers (ages 25-34) dominate this group – 68 percent of them have less than $25,000 earmarked for their later years. But so do half of workers age 35 to 44 and a third of workers age 45 to 55 and over.

Also from EBRI: the press release and links to the report.

Manners and blogs: an oxymoron?

Some organizations are calling for a code of conduct for bloggers, according to NY Times piece A Call for Manners in the World of Nasty Blogs – New York Times, especially after some vicious online battles and the harassing of women bloggers.

Chief among the recommendations is that bloggers consider banning anonymous comments left by visitors to their pages and be able to delete threatening or libelous comments without facing cries of censorship.

Drudge Report after 12 years

Lost Remote: Drudge Report keeps growingIn a message posted on the site, the Drudge Report says it set a traffic record last month with 425 million home page views, up from 287 million last March.

Some complain that it’s just an aggregator, no a legitimate news site, but it does drive a lot of traffic to those legitimate sites.

Journalists as marketers — of their work

Lost Remote: Why journalists have to promote their workDriven by the web and steadily decreasing TV news ratings, it’s critical for TV reporters to juggle their schedule to write web versions of their stories, write blog posts, plug them on the air and make sure TV producers are effectively promoting their TV and web reporting. It’s every journalist’s responsibility now, along with management.

A bee crisis

Christian Science Monitor: What’s happening to the bees. Several stories this year on disappearing bee colonies. The experts call it “colony collapse disorder” CCD and they site several possible reasons including: an Asian mite, the stress on the bees of shipping colonies around the country, and environmental issues, such as pesticides.

Also NY Times: Mystery Disease Is Threat to Bee ColoniesReports of unusual colony deaths have come from at least 22 states. Some commercial beekeepers have reported losing more than 50 percent of their bees.

Google now looking offline

NY Times: Google, Online Ad Giant, Looks at Radio and TV

Google may one day rock the television and radio advertising markets. But its TV plans have yet to take shape, and its other efforts to extend its dominance over online advertising into offline media like newspapers and radio are inching along. The early results are mixed, suggesting that Google’s successful transition from online kingpin to credible player in traditional media is far from assured.