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EmperorHenry ,
@EmperorHenry@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

You failed as a teacher, volume 1

Carlo ,

Ah yes, another casus belli for the generation war. The whole concept of generalizing an entire cohort of humanity is bogus. Just another nonsense distraction to generate a bunch of clickbait bullshit articles, and get people angry at the young or the old, instead of the rich. No war but the class war.

Edit: Not really directed at you, OP.

sol6_vi ,
@sol6_vi@lemmy.world avatar

Who cares. Analog audio, video, phones, all out the window. Next people will be complaining people don’t even know anything about vacuum tubes. Digital clocks are easier to read and make more fuckin sense. Leave the kids alone. 🙄🙄🙄

FatherGascown ,

Not only we have retarded boomers, we also have kids who are too stupid to read an analog clock. Wonderful.

monsterpiece42 ,

Yeah definitely a stupidity problem and not an education problem. /s

Korrok ,

I’m a millenial and I can read analog clocks, but it takes me a few seconds, it’s not as instant as with digital ones.

Venator ,

Especially when they have no numbers.

leadore ,
@leadore@lemmy.world avatar

OK let’s have a lesson for those who find this difficult. First, remember that little kids pick this up quickly and easily, so you can too!

We all know there are 60 seconds in a minute, 60 minutes in an hour, and 24 hours in a day, right? and that the day is divided into the a.m. of 12 hours and the p.m. of 12 hours.

So analog clocks show those 12 hours as the numbers 1-12 evenly spaced around the clock face. Now look a little closer and you see it’s also divided into 60 marks with a tick mark for each of the 60 seconds/minute or 60 minutes/hour. Hang on, we’re almost there!

The little hand points to the HOUR number (1-12). If it’s in between two numbers, that means the time is in between those two hours.

The big hand points to the MINUTE tick mark. Notice that the 1-12 numbers coincide with each 5th tick mark so it’s easy to count them. Just count by 5’s! So if the big hand is between the 3 and the 4, that means the minute of the hour is between 15 and 20, look at which tick mark for the exact minute.

Now, can you figure out how the second hand works? Good! Kindergarten dismissed!

/s

Toribor ,
@Toribor@corndog.social avatar

I can tell the time perfectly well unless someone asks me what time it is. Then my brain is completely useless and I just have to twist my wrist around awkwardly to show them.

Etterra ,

Back to kindergarten then.

Anti_Face_Weapon ,

I don’t believe this for a second. You can literally just look at it and intuitively understand. Not to mention part of the standard elementary school curriculum is how to read a clock.

zarkanian ,
@zarkanian@sh.itjust.works avatar

Wait…you think those are intuitive? Fuck no.

Who’s going to intuitively know that “long hand pointing at 2” means “10 minutes after the hour”? Also, having the long hand for minutes is super unintuitive when hours are longer than minutes.

GaMEChld ,

May not be super intuitive, but getting rid of them is intellectually lazy. If you know an hour is 60 minutes, it makes enough sense.

If an hour is 60 minutes, 60/12 is 5 minutes per number on the clock. Long hand is minutes because there are more minutes in a day than hours. Or at least that’s how I can rationalize it.

If you can explain an analog clock that quickly, it’s just lazy for them to not learn it. It also has cross application to make people more comfortable with mental math and multiples commonly seen in trigonometry.

leadore ,
@leadore@lemmy.world avatar

Minutes are the smaller time division with 60 possible values so that hand is longer to reach to the tick marks for easier reading of the exact minute.

The hour hand only needs to distinguish between 12 possible values that are more spread out around the perimeter, so it doesn’t need to reach very far to tell which hour out of 12 it is.

Venator ,

Real reason is probably that the schools don’t have the budget to pay for the batteries, or for someone to make sure the time is correct on all of them in the school…

JordanZ ,

deleted_by_author

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  • Venator ,

    In that case the rats probably ate the wires and they can’t afford to repair it… 😅

    openrain502r ,

    bruh I can read analogue clocks and I’m gen z. it’s probably rage bait though, so who cares :/

    isolatedscotch ,
    @isolatedscotch@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

    it’s not rage bait, I’ve seen it happen plenty of times

    thesushicat ,

    It’s true. I teach college kids, and a couple of years ago my class was taking a midterm. The room didn’t have a clock so I put my watch on the document camera display so they’d know how much time was left. A girl in the front row asked me what time it was, because she couldn’t tell time. After she turned in her test, thinking she must be kind of embarrassed about this, I told her I’d be happy to teach her how to tell time. She gave me a look like “ok, boomer” and said no thanks.

    SkunkWorkz ,

    Yeah that girl is going places in life. Though probably not on time.

    leadore , (edited )
    @leadore@lemmy.world avatar

    Anyone who wants to understand how to read an analog clock can learn it in two minutes, it’s not like you need to be taught in school. edit to add: My brother recently told me that he was at the library and his friend’s teenage daughter looked at the analog clock and said indignantly “I can’t read that!” So apparently it is true that people aren’t learning simple skills like this.

    lud ,

    I personally know how to read an analog watch but I do it so rarely that it takes a bit of time thinking before I figure it out and convert it to 24 hour time. Because I use digital time absolutely everywhere and never analog time.

    Hell I even got a digital wrist watch, mostly because it’s easier and faster to read for me but also because it’s more accurate. I will admit that the hitchhikers guide to the galaxy also played a role in the purchase.

    leadore ,
    @leadore@lemmy.world avatar

    Digital vs. analog watches that run on batteries are no more or less accurate because of how the time is displayed. I have a digital clock display on my battery-powered cordless phone (yes I also have a landline) that is constantly plugged into a power source and it loses a minute or two every day. Your computer and phone only keep displaying the correct time because they frequently update themselves from an online source.

    lud ,

    My watch frequently (daily but only if I’m sleeping with it, for some reason) updates itself via radio. It’s generally accurate to a second or maybe even half a second. But the main reason, It’s easier to tell exactly what the time is in seconds when it’s digital compared to a fast spinning stick.

    doggle ,

    Honest question; why would they? Digital clocks and watches are have been cheaper and more accurate (and as a result more ubiquitous) for many years now. I think there’s a strong argument that analogue clocks are obsolete, and that’s why teens and kids aren’t learning to read them.

    bleistift2 ,

    Are all public clocks in the US digital clocks? Off the top of my head, I can tell you 4 locations within walking distance that have analog clocks, one of them being the train station.

    leadore ,
    @leadore@lemmy.world avatar

    Nope, it still seems like most of the ones I see are analog, as in my library example. Probably most people ignore them and just check their phones for the time since they are constantly looking at them anyway.

    can ,

    The point is the instinct to check phone for the time is so strong that they’re not looking around for clocks.

    Raglesnarf ,

    I just really enjoy the photo, the character looks funny. I agree that shit like this just causes division but at the same time it’s like any other rude meme towards group X or person Y. just another dumb meme to go ha ha to and move on

    DNOS ,

    Guys lets be honest why point at small Numbers which you have to read in a specific sequence while doing some math when you can easily and nowadays probably more efficiently (paper-ink) display them… Analog clocks are going to disappear and people will watch at them with the same eyes as we watch a sundial…(Btw I had to search for the translation of the world sundial that’s how common it is … 😉)
    I can ready It but i get teens Who dont

    Wizard_Pope ,
    @Wizard_Pope@lemmy.world avatar

    They should just be taught how to read time in school

    DNOS ,

    Yeah or Just replace every old watch 😉

    SpaceCowboy ,
    @SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca avatar

    Analog clocks are a better representation of how we think of time than a digital clock.

    If someone looks and immediately afterwards someone asks them for the time, they will look at their watch again. The number isn’t really what matters, it’s “how long until X will happen” that matters more.

    You know you’re meeting is at 10:30, you see it’s 9:55. You know it’s about a half hour until the meeting, and the meeting will happen when that big hand gets to the bottom. The numbers themselves won’t do that for you, you have to think 60 minutes in an hour, 60-5 = 5 + 30 = 35 minutes away. When you check the digital clock again you see 10:17, so you have to think 30-17 = 13 minutes until the meeting. But with an analog clock it’s like a reusable progress bar (well progress arc to be more accurate). Quick glance and you see how far the minute hand has to go and you’re good.

    Sure the mental math needed to get a sense of time with a digital clock isn’t all that hard. But it is an additional step over the adhoc progress arcs that analog clocks provide.

    Digital clocks are fine and all, but are just slightly worse than analog clocks. Just how technology is going I guess, always giving us something that’s technically more advanced but worse for humans to interface with.

    GelatinGeorge ,

    Er, what? If I look at the clock and see it’s 0955 I know exactly that it’s 35 minutes. Same for every other example you give. If it’s 1252, it’s so easy to add 8 minutes then add whatever it is more. And you can do that for any time. Say 1017. “Oh no!” Never fear, the just add it to the time wangs are here: +13 to 30 and woah! Easy, foolproof and actually intuitive

    SpaceCowboy ,
    @SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca avatar

    1030-955=75. So intuitively, it would be 75 minutes until the meeting. Oh wait… maybe it’s not intuitive?

    210 degree arc is always going to be 35 minutes. Whether it’s the 35 minutes from 9:55 to 10:30 or 9:50 to 10:25 or 3:15 to 3:50 or whatever. Sure you have to get used to the arcs. But once you do, it’s a quick glance at the minute hand and seeing how far away it is from the time of the meeting (or whatever the next thing is). Time for a computer is a number, time for a human is how long until a thing is going to happen.

    AFC1886VCC ,

    Always feels like these articles (and headlines in particular) are made to stir up division on social media.

    texasspacejoey ,

    Shouldnt we blame the teachers for fsiling to teach kids how to read the clock?

    Sunroc ,

    Brain rot is only a moral failing of the children. What more can the teachers and parents do?!

    UnderpantsWeevil ,
    @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world avatar

    Or the schools for removing the clocks, thus preventing anyone from practicing.

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