In a tribute to our letter writing skills, and to passing this great tradition down to our children, Laura McGowan of Coffee and A Miracle has given me permission to re-post her recent post on acclaiming a nation letter writing day. Here is her post....please follow the link to sign the petition. How can teachers help? Use the inserts from magazines to have students fill out their personal data (be sure to shred it at the end of the class, it contains personal information) and find pen pals in other classrooms across the nation...
I recently posted a petition on whitehouse.gov encouraging the administration to establish a national "Write-a-Letter Day."I hope you'll consider signing it and passing this on.
I am shocked that so many young people no longer know how to create and mail a handwritten correspondence. I believe the Post Office is a great institution that should be preserved. "Write-a-Letter Day" is meant to promote personal connections through handwritten correspondence and help the P.O. by increasing the number of first-class mailings.
You can view and sign the petition here: http://wh.gov/JPAD
Here's some more information about this petition: Create "Write a Letter Day." Teach youngsters to write and address a letter. Promote stamps and save the Post Office. The Post Office, one of our national treasures, is losing money due to declining first-class letter mailings. Many young people today have never written a letter by hand and do not know how to properly address an envelope. Our Post Office designs and prints many beautiful and meaningful stamps each year. Postal employees often offer amazing customer service. For these reasons, we should declare a national "Write-a-Letter Day." It should be sometime during the school year so teachers could incorporate it into their curriculum when appropriate. The tradition of handwritten cards and letters is quickly fading. This day would support the P.O. and this great tradition. It would encourage people to buy stamps and visit their local P.O. And it would promote connections with friends or relatives.

