At least 31 states and the District of Columbia restrict cell phones in schools

New York City teachers say the state’s recently implemented cell phone ban in schools has showed that numerous students no longer know how to tell time on an old-fashioned clock.

“That’s a major skill that they’re not used to at all,” Tiana Millen, an assistant principal at Cardozo High School in Queens, told Gothamist of what she’s noticed after the ban, which went into effect in September.

Students in the city’s school system are meant to learn basic time-telling skills in the first and second grade, according to officials, though it appears children have fallen out of practice doing so in an increasingly digital world.

  • MasterBlaster@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    And yet, we still have analog clocks all around us. Seems to me we should know his to use them… Unlike a sextant.

    Still, knowing what those things are and how they work just might be useful if something similar becomes important for some reason.

    Those things should be known by at least enough of the population to bring them back and use them if everything goes apocalyptic.

    If things start falling apart, I’m throwing in with the Amish.

    • Instigate@aussie.zone
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      4 days ago

      Learning to read analogue clocks also helps provide some foundational learning for circular geometry - being able to quickly identify relevant segments of a circle and their respective fractions (5 minutes = 1/12 = 30° = π/6 rad etc.) helps build towards being able to compute circular geometric problems more easily in later years.

      • Welt@lazysoci.al
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        4 days ago

        Turnips more or less grow themselves, but raising a barn without modern cordless tools and truss plates requires a lot of the skills we should be lamenting the loss of. Hand saws, hand planes, handmade nails (that are expensive), hand sharpening and sanding… there’s more to building a barn than growing a field of turnips is all I’m sayin.

        • MasterBlaster@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          Indeed, and even the turnips require soil that helps them grow. The Amish are experts at land management without chemicals. We take such poor care of our land that most nonprofessional farming will take years of land work just to get a useful yield.