ChatterBank2 mins ago
Young Can 'only Read Digital Clocks'
//That's the claim in a debate between teachers - with suggestions that digital clocks are being installed in exam halls for teenagers.
It follows a report in the Times Educational Supplement of a conference being told that pupils needed a digital clock to be able to tell the time.//
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/ed ucation -438828 47
These are GCSE and A-level students so not so very young. Fine, they’ll be able to tell the time in exam halls – but what about in the rest of the world? Rather than simply install clocks they can read, I wonder if anyone has ever considered an option that would be far more useful to them - teaching them to tell the time?
It follows a report in the Times Educational Supplement of a conference being told that pupils needed a digital clock to be able to tell the time.//
http://
These are GCSE and A-level students so not so very young. Fine, they’ll be able to tell the time in exam halls – but what about in the rest of the world? Rather than simply install clocks they can read, I wonder if anyone has ever considered an option that would be far more useful to them - teaching them to tell the time?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by naomi24. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I can tell those plants apart and it has massively increased my appreciation of the world around me but that is irrelevant here. If we think we should only teach what are essentials now then no point in teaching history either. I know we have had a similar discussion on here about why teach tables when everyone uses a calculator. Not doom mongering but all this tech relies 100% on power - that may not always be available in the future. Mad Max and all that.
// Just teach kids both. Problem solved. //
They do teach kids both.
But if the kids are not seeing clocks with hands, then they won’t be regularly using that knowledge, and they will forget.
I used to be able to do quadratic equations forty years ago, but I have not had to for four decades, so I wouldn’t know how to now.
They do teach kids both.
But if the kids are not seeing clocks with hands, then they won’t be regularly using that knowledge, and they will forget.
I used to be able to do quadratic equations forty years ago, but I have not had to for four decades, so I wouldn’t know how to now.
I find a lot of people are totally confused by the 24 hr system, which is odd because the armed forces use it to avoid confusion. One person I know booked a flight which was to leave at 1600 hours, she thought that was 6 o'clock. To make matters worse she did this twice in one year.
When the clock on the Elizabeth tower goes digital and Big Ben is a recording, I will acknowledge then that the analogue watch is a museum piece.
When the clock on the Elizabeth tower goes digital and Big Ben is a recording, I will acknowledge then that the analogue watch is a museum piece.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.