Has the value of writing by hand gone forever? Not according to new research examining the cognitive benefits of pen and paper.
When was the last time we recorded something by hand? For many of us, writing by hand may have become a rare, if not abandoned, practice. Being able to take notes on phones or enter ideas using keyboards is usually faster and easier.
For some professional writers, the idea that a pen can aid creativity and thinking will not be news. Despite the digital turn, some writers continue to use handwritten text as a way to increase their productivity. However, the scientific world has only recently begun to grasp the supposed benefits of this practice, but the first results are already convincing. So why is it important to write by hand?
The answer seems to be related to the relative complexity of the action compared to typing on a computer. Writing by hand requires more movement, more skill and coordination, and greater visual attention, and therefore encourages different parts of the brain to come together to turn the shapes in our heads into something visible on the page.
Still, typing on a computer is not useless. We can still make such connections and integrate information, but we must do so more consciously. And just because handwriting seems more useful for remembering and processing information doesn’t mean we should ditch our digital tools. Some studies even show that simply using a pen on the screen can be just as beneficial, since the writing movement is important, not the medium, Science Alert reports.