Saturday, May 22, 2010

A fifth of British children have never received a letter

One in five children in the UK has never received a received a handwritten letter, according to a survey published yesterday. With young people increasingly relying on email and social networking sites to communicate, a tenth had never written a letter themselves, the research found. Teachers and experts said they feared young people were missing out on the pleasures and developmental benefits of letter writing.

The survey of 1,200 seven - to 14-year-olds, commissioned for children's charity World Vision, found that more than a quarter had not written a letter in the last year and 43% had not been sent one. But in the previous week alone, almost half had either sent or received an email, or a message on a social networking site. Boys were twice as likely as girls never to have never written a letter.



Child education expert Sue Palmer, the author of Toxic Childhood, said: "If children do not write or receive letters, they miss out on key developmental benefits. Handwritten letters are much more personal than electronic communication. By going to the trouble of physically committing words to paper, the writer shows their investment of time and effort in a relationship. That's why we tend to hang on to personal letters as keepsakes.

"The effort of writing is a very real one for a child. Painstakingly manoeuvring the pencil across the page, thinking of the best words to convey a message, struggling with spelling and punctuation. It is, however, an effort worth making, because it's only through practice that we become truly literate – and literacy is the hallmark of human civilisation." Half of 11-year olds were not sure how to lay out a letter and a third of 14-year olds weren't either. The traditional thank you letter was the most common reason for putting pen to paper, making up 70% of children's efforts. Only one in five wrote letters to friends.

5 comments:

spurge said...

I was born in 1974 - and I have never received a telegraph, morse-code missive, or a carrier pigeon message. What is the world coming to... oh yeah PROGRESS...

Steve said...

I was born in 1962 and I can recall sending and receiving letters. I remember actually being disappointed when I got a typed letter as it seemed so impersonal. 
It is progress but when we email instead of taking the time to write, when we text instead of call... we're progressing to a very impersonal future.

One last rant. Textspeak. I hate the stuff. I can only imagine the future generations will be reduced to near illiteracy. 

Andiscandis said...

My grandmother recently gave me a box of fancy envelopes and said, "I got these because I know you write letters."

I thought, "my God, I haven't written a PAPER letter since 1995!"

Foreigner1 said...

OMG Now I really start to feel like a fossil- I'm from 1966 and I still -about as we speak- write and get handwritten letters to and from my wife and some friends...!
Sure I email a lot and I text a lot. but there still is a whole lot of things I best share with certain friends and my wife by handwriting them down on paper and I really appreciate it when people make the effort to write down the personal things they want to share. 

L said...

I was born in the late 1970s.  I used to have pen pals as a kid.  I kind of miss the whole handwritten-letter experience.

To be honest, though, I'm surprised that 4 out of 5 children in the UK have received a handwritten letter.