Anonymous wrote:Trying showing your child a rotary phone a ask them to dial a number. They try to "push" on the numbers 🙂
Anonymous wrote:For some reason, my kid with a high IQ and no learning disability or other diagnosis had the hardest time telling time on an analog clock![]()
She finally managed it in middle school. Her ADHD/ASD brother could do that as a preschooler.
Kids are weird.
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.
Yes, like all of us were taught to read a sundial. Honestly, we don’t read Roman numerals or sundials. And our kids are not going to be looking at cursive and analog clocks in their 30s. It is what it is. The world moves on.
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.
Yes, like all of us were taught to read a sundial. Honestly, we don’t read Roman numerals or sundials. And our kids are not going to be looking at cursive and analog clocks in their 30s. It is what it is. The world moves on.