Subscribe to free Email Newsletter

 
  Info>View
 
 
 
Amnesia with Chinese Characters

 

Today we take the comforts taken from modern devices for granted. We are used to typing before the computer, sometimes under the proud banner of a “paper-free office.” Admittedly, we are reducing the consumption of paper by sending emails and using instant communications. The problem is that the addiction to computer-based comfort has long been neglected. We are able to type more than 100 Chinese characters a minute on a computer, but we can write much fewer characters on paper, or, even worse, we even don’t know how.

Today, letters have given way to emails and mobile messages. Dairies have taken a back seat to blogs and other forms of cyber-journalism. Our names are becoming the only characters we still write by hand, as we often have to fill in various forms, and affix our signatures to the documents in our daily lives. This is a bad comment on our writing skills.

This issue has raised concerns from all walks of life. In 2008, the Education Ministry surveyed 3,000 teachers from around the country and found that 60% complained about declining writing ability. As a result, the ministry last year launched a writing competition with 10 million participants and has begun pilot programs to make students do more handwriting.

More significantly, we have to learn to liberate ourselves from our dependency on computers and mobile phones before it is too late. We are not acting like Chicken Little. It may prove to be a disaster waiting to happen.

By Xu Xinlei

1 2
 

 


 
Print
Save