benefits of handwriting vs typing

21 09, 2016

How’s your writing schedule compare to Henry Miller’s?

By |2016-09-15T22:37:47-05:00September 21st, 2016|Wednesday Words of Wisdom|0 Comments

scheduleIn 1932-1933, while working on what would become his first published novel, Miller devised and adhered to a stringent daily routine to propel his writing.

While working on his first published novel, Tropic of Cancer, Henry Miller devised a stringent daily routine to advance his writing. This is his 1930s blueprint for productivity.

MORNINGS:

If groggy, type notes and allocate, as stimulus.

If in fine fettle, write.

(Now if you wondering what a fettle might be: according to the British Dictionary a fettle is state of health, spirits, etc  We’d probably say mood today.)

AFTERNOONS:

Work of section in hand, following plan of section scrupulously. No intrusions, no diversions. Write to finish one section at a time, for good and all.

EVENINGS:

See friends. Read in cafés.

Explore unfamiliar sections — on foot if wet, on bicycle if dry.

Write, if in mood, but only on Minor program.

Paint if empty or tired.

Make Notes. Make Charts, Plans. Make corrections of MS.

I love his additional note for the evenings:

Allow sufficient time during daylight to make an occasional visit to museums or an occasional sketch or an occasional bike ride.

Sketch in cafés and trains and streets.

Cut the movies!

Library for references once a week.

(In our 21st century vocabulary, we’d probably change Library to Internet or Social Media.)

His daily schedule points out to things:

Prolific writers write every day.

Prolific writers write most of the day.

I can only wish I had such discipline.

What do you think about Miller’s tight schedule?

27 04, 2015

Should we be handwriting more?

By |2015-04-27T06:00:57-05:00April 27th, 2015|Make Me Think Monday|2 Comments

keyboardIn these days of touch screens and keyboarding, handwriting seems a lost art. Personally, I think that’s a shame.

I’ve also discovered studies show handwriting has the advantage over typing on creativity, memory, and information retention.

Don’t believe me?

Studies by Pam Mueller and Daniel Oppenheimer have shown that using your laptop or note app for note taking actually hinders your ability to learn information.

You can read their full research paper here or check out this Washington Post article on the paper:

Interesting conundrum if you’re a teacher. Do you allow your students to use technology or require handwritten note taking?

Even if we’re not students or teachers, the Mueller and Oppenheimer study suggests handwriting offers four benefits.

·Increases Conceptual Understanding

Stronger conceptual understanding means more success in applying and integrating of material.

·Enhances Cognitive Processing

You can only write so fast, so your brain processes more as your hand writes more of the crucial data. Typing may be faster, but cognitively the words of the other person are not sinking into your brain.

·Stimulates short-term and long-term memory

Handwriting stimulates more effective memory cues because you’re forming the context and content in your own words.

·PROVIDES Better focus

One pen, one notebook, one hand means not much that can distract your attention. A laptop, on the other hand, is a smorgasbord of focus distractions.

Personally, I prefer handwriting because I love wandering the office supply store or aisle for neat writing paper and lovely pens, and I think handwritten notes lend a personal connection that print from a computer can’t give.

So, food for thought. No definitive answers.

How would you answer the handwriting vs keyboarding question?

 

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