Here are little cars that may some day take the place of today’s cars. If everyone drives such a car in the future, there will be less pollution in the air. There will also be more parking spaces in cities, and the streets will be less crowded. Three such Cars fit in the space now needed for one Car of the usual size. The little cars will cost much less to own and to drive. Driving will be safer, too, as these little cars can go only 55 miles per hour. The Cars of the future will be fine for getting around a city, but they will not be useful for long trips.
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Do American children still learn handwriting in school In this age of the keyboard, some people seem to think handwriting lessons are on the way out.
We asked Professor Steve Graham at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. He told us that he has been hearing about the death of handwriting for the past fifteen years. He said: "If the results of a survey we had published this year are accurate, it is being taught by about ninety percent of teachers in grades one to three."
Ninety percent of teachers also say they are required to teach handwriting. But studies have yet to answer the question of how well they are teaching it. Professor Graham said: "One study published this year found that about three out of every four teachers say they are not prepared to teach handwriting.
And then when you look at how it’s taught, you have some teachers who are teaching handwriting by providing instruction for ten, fifteen minutes a day, and th
A. handwriting lessons take too much of their time
B. handwriting lessons are boring for kids
C. they write little at present time
D. they write through computers not by handwriting
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