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As digital learning continues to expand, a bill is ready to go to the full Florida House that would require public elementary-school students to learn cursive writing.

The House Education & Employment Committee on Thursday unanimously approved the bill (HB 921), which would require cursive instruction in grades 2 through 5 and require students to demonstrate proficiency by the end of fifth grade.

โ€œCursive writing plays a crucial role in everyday life,โ€ bill sponsor Toby Overdorf, R-Palm City, told the committee. โ€œGoing to a bank, signing your name, putting your name on a voter ID card, and that individual signature that then has to be replicated over and over again to prove that you are you.โ€

Overdorf said โ€œmostโ€ private schools are already teaching cursive writing to proficiency.

While she voted for the measure, Rep. Rita Harris, D-Orlando, said cursive writing is already taught at public schools and that she thinks students are โ€œover-testedโ€ already.

โ€œMaybe kids who are second-graders can begin to learn cursive, and it will catch things like dyslexia earlier, and some hand-eye coordination with them earlier as well, but in a way thatโ€™s not going to put more pressure on the teachers and the students,โ€ Harris said.

Sen. Erin Grall, R-Vero Beach, has filed a Senate version of the bill (SB 1394), which has not been heard in committees.

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