Why is calligraphy not valued?

This problem is more complicated ... it can't be said that calligraphy class is not taken seriously. Personally, regardless of primary school, junior high school, senior high school or university, schools are willing to offer calligraphy classes if conditions permit. The problem is that it is more difficult to offer calligraphy classes. I will probably list my own views without making a specific analysis.

1, students lack enthusiasm. Although we often say that having a good hand is "very important", how important is it? Is it important to have a culture class? Moreover, most students and parents require Chinese characters to be neat, beautiful and curly, so there is no need to study them specially.

2. "Good-looking" doesn't mean calligraphy. Generally speaking, good-looking words are actually "neat handwriting", but neat handwriting in calligraphy (even regular script) is not a benchmark to measure the quality of words.

3. Lack of teachers. Although there are many members of calligraphy associations at all levels, they are talented enough to be teachers, and few people are interested in this. Reasoning calligraphy should be taught by Chinese teachers at school, but from primary school to high school, there are only a few Chinese teachers who can hold writing brushes, let alone find time to teach students.

4. It is difficult to attend classes. From my personal experience, if a calligraphy teacher wants to achieve better teaching effect, it is best to limit the number of students to less than ten, and if there are too many, he can't continue teaching. Calligraphy classes in universities range from 30 to 40 students to 60 to 70 or even nearly 100 students. A teacher can't manage it at all, so the teacher will talk in class, show a video, and then patrol twice, and two classes will be gone.

I'm tired of typing ... I don't want to type any more ... This question is too big to answer, so I can ask specific questions for the time being ~