owlfish: (Fishy Circumstances)
S. Worthen ([personal profile] owlfish) wrote2015-08-30 11:35 pm

Pens

This article on How the ballpoint pen killed cursive (via [livejournal.com profile] andrewducker) reminds me of something.

I did a single year in London pre-tertiary education, in first year secondary school. One of the many differences between that and my otherwise mostly US-based early formal education was that the school required us to have a fountain pen. My parents bought me a cheap basic school model, refilled with cartridges like everyone else. It was meant for more formal writing situations (with ballpoints allowed in less formal situations), but I found it awkward since I hadn't ever used one before that. As I know from later usage, better-quality fountain pens can be lovely to write with; this one wasn't.

But that's not the point. I haven't heard anyone discuss fountain pens outside the realm of specialist love and practice since then.

Are fountain pens still used in the UK educational system anywhere, or have they fallen by the wayside in the intervening decades?

(My own pen-love has largely settled on superfine felt-tips these days.)

[identity profile] sioneva.livejournal.com 2015-08-31 07:02 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't know about UK schools but in my French high school they definitely used them and, I would think, probably still do.

[identity profile] rosamicula.livejournal.com 2015-09-02 01:34 pm (UTC)(link)
I am a teacher and French colleagues, even very young ones, are always appalled by their English pupils' infantile handwriting.