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NPR News

Students Compete To See Who Has The Best Cursive Writing

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STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

When was the last time you ever wrote a note or a letter by hand in cursive? Well, some students are not only practicing that. They're competing in it.

ANVITA RAYABARAPU: I am a National Zaner-Bloser Handwriting Contest seventh grade winner.

RACHEL MARTIN, HOST:

That's 12-year-old Anvita Rayabarapu, a student at Pleasant Ridge Middle School in Overland Park, Kan. She says handwriting is still an important way to communicate.

ANVITA: It helps you like, think and learn more efficiently and I think personally enhances my creativity.

INSKEEP: The Zaner-Bloser National Handwriting Competition has been going on for 30 years, 30 years in which handwriting has come to seem a lot less important to a lot of people. The competition is open to students from public and private schools, kindergarten through the eighth grade. And to make things fair, everybody writes the exact same sentence.

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LISA CARMONA: The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog because that sentence contains every letter of the alphabet.

MARTIN: Lisa Carmona is the president of Zaner-Bloser, the education company that runs the contest.

CARMONA: The handwriting contest inspires students to do their best work, and it really celebrates that academic achievement and the students' persistence and practice and all of those things.

MARTIN: Students who win the national competition take home a trophy and $500.

INSKEEP: But for students like Anvita, it's about more than the prizes.

ANVITA: It feels like an honor when you write in cursive because it's like an ancient type of writing. So it's really nice. And I think everyone should be able to write and learn cursive.

(SOUNDBITE OF DORENA'S "HER COMFORTING TOUCH") Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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