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Gen Z is losing handwriting — and maybe basic communication skills

The shift away from handwriting is not trivial.

Summarised by Centrist

For 5,500 years, handwriting has been central to human communication. But new research suggests Generation Z may be the first to lose it. A University of Stavanger study reports that about 40 percent of young people born between the late 1990s and early 2010s struggle to communicate effectively by hand.

Digital habits are partly to blame. Social media, keyboards and touchscreens have replaced pen and paper in school and daily life. Experts warn this shift isn’t trivial: handwriting is linked to memory, comprehension and the ability to form coherent arguments.

Professors quoted by Türkiye Today say university students now show little knowledge of basic writing structure. They often avoid paragraphs, rely on short, broken sentences and sometimes even arrive at class without pens. Professor Nedret Kiliceri attributes this to the influence of social media’s clipped, reactive style.

The implications go beyond sloppy handwriting. Researchers argue that the loss of pen-and-paper writing may erode more reflective, personal communication, replacing it with quick, impulsive exchanges. The broader concern is whether future generations can balance digital fluency with the age-old skills that helped shape human society.

Read more over at Evidence Network

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