Anonymous wrote:Yes. We have one in the kitchen and in the family room of our house. DS15 can read the clock and is in charge of changing the time 2x a year. Older ds is in the military so we are practicing military time now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, but it's a dying art like cursive.
Telling time isn't "art" is a basic life skill, the basic of all life skills.
Anonymous wrote:My tween can read a clock, but has trouble with whether noon is 12:00 am or pm. Thinks noon is more logically 12:00 am, and then pm should start "after noon" at 12:01.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, but it's a dying art like cursive.
Telling time isn't "art" is a basic life skill, the basic of all life skills.
Which can be done almost exclusively these days without consulting an analog clock. I taught my child how to tell time when he was 6 or 7, but it's becoming increasingly obsolete. 50 or 60 years ago the only way to weight something was to apply various weights to one side of the scale. While that skill might still be useful in a pinch no one does it like that anymore.
Well....now that MCPS has removed cell phones from the classrooms, a lot of kids don't know how to find out the time. The obvious solution is to read the clock on the wall in the room. MCPS has invested in analog clocks. They work. MCPS is not going to replace the clocks on the wall with digital clocks. So the kids either need to get a watch, learn to read the clock, or accept that they'll know when class is over when they hear the bell. MCPS can't tell parents to buy their kids a watch but they can teach them to read the clock.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, but it's a dying art like cursive.
Telling time isn't "art" is a basic life skill, the basic of all life skills.
Which can be done almost exclusively these days without consulting an analog clock. I taught my child how to tell time when he was 6 or 7, but it's becoming increasingly obsolete. 50 or 60 years ago the only way to weight something was to apply various weights to one side of the scale. While that skill might still be useful in a pinch no one does it like that anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, but it's a dying art like cursive.
Telling time isn't "art" is a basic life skill, the basic of all life skills.
Anonymous wrote:My 10th grader and senior were both taught cursive, in school, pre-covid. And they can tell time on clocks (also taught in school).
My 8tn grader was not taught to read or write cursive, or how to tell time on a clock. Who know what else they weren't taught that the older two know.
Anonymous wrote:I hope to God this is a fake post op.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, of course. It's covered in 1st and 2nd grade.