As have I. Perhaps our experiences simply have been very different. You seriously haven't noticed a massive increase in poor writing in your latter half?
What I've noticed is a massive increase in WRITING! Thirty years ago most people probably didn't write three letters a year, counting the long one they Xeroxed and sent to everybody at Christmas. Only people who actually liked to write wrote, and they were self-selected for the skill and interest that made it easy to do correctly.
Nowadays it seems that most people send out several e-mails
every day, younger people text-message more often than that, and an amazing number of us post on internet boards. Today people are writing who don't have the aptitude and education to do it well.
I saw the same thing in music. In the late 1950s and early 1960s there was a lot of abysmally bad guitar-playing going on at parties and other gatherings. But that's because millions of people who would never have thought of taking up the instrument a generation previously ran into the nearest music store (or Sears Roebuck) when Dwayne Eddy and Chuck Berry revolutionized guitar music. They didn't have the aptitude to learn or the dedication to practice, but they had the interest to do it poorly and enjoy it.
Regardless, perhaps at least this you may grant: when you and I were writing out essays longhand, errors in spelling and grammar were certainly less, if indeed not, acceptable.
Don't get me started on a tirade about the dilapidation of the American educational system. I hate to sound like one of those old guys going on about walking five miles through the snow to go to a music store that only sold vinyl records. I.e., I don't think the decline in communication or any other skill is the direct effect of new technology.
Thomas Edison invented a quick printing style to take down Morse Code - it wasn't cursive, it was faster than cursive.
Sure, but since it wasn't cursive nobody else could read it. It was a code. The whole point of cursive writing is that the letters are basically printed letters in a different font with connecting strokes. Theoretically, if you can read printing you should be able to figure out cursive writing pretty quickly even if you've never seen it before. It takes training to write, but not to read. Of course that's a stretch with several of the lower-case letters like F, R and S.
Cursive writing, since by definition it's not printed, has not been standardized among nations. It can be very difficult to read the handwriting of someone from Spain or Poland. Some of them make a lower case R that looks more like the printed font, but they they have other letters that are not easily recognized. You have to take an inventory and figure out which one is missing and say, "Aha, this must be the way they write a P in Lower East Saxony."
I still say it looks like at least partly a class distinction in the first place, and almost totally a status and class distinction after the typewriter. People who had a "good hand" had a little extra status, girls who were not eligible for jobs were taught penmanship as well as given piano lessons, etc. Orleander's sentiment is common: My grandmother, a schoolteacher, wrote a Spencerian script - people have been known to frame pages of her letters, and hang them on the wall.
It was a mark of distinction even before the typewriter. Calligraphy was a profession. People wanted the effect of intimacy that comes with sending out handwritten things like wedding invitations, but they didn't think their own handwriting was worthy.
Look at the countries that use Chinese characters. Writing really is an art to them. Even a humble home has a wise old saying painted beautifully by a calligrapher in 1000-point type, framed and hanging on a wall prominently. And painters are expected to make their signatures part of the art of their paintings.
And of course the average citizen writes Chinese characters in a fast cursive style, with the strokes connected and with corners rounded.
Some people - maybe not all - have a physical or somatic connection with thinking. They think by hand, learn by hand, to a degree.
Written language and spoken language do not use exactly the same brain centers. Like many people who have had strokes and lose their speech, my father could write perfectly. Speaking, understanding speech, writing and reading are four distinct abilities even though they have much in common.
Anyone who's studied a foreign language has come up against that realization. Most of us do best with reading and worst with writing, with speaking and oral understanding in between ranked according to the language. It's easier to understand spoken Chinese than to speak it, whereas Spanish is just the opposite.
I don't make an 8 like that either. I start in the middle, going down counterclockwise.
And here I thought I was the only one who did that, although I go up clockwise. I developed that as an affectation when I was a teenager. I also make my nines with the staff sticking into the lower right quadrant of the loop instead of the upper right quadrant, which I picked up from Europeans. I tried making my sevens the European way, with a loop on both corners and a slash across the staff, but everybody thought they were fours.