As a parent, we made sure to have an analog clock in every room while my kids were growing up, and we made them prove they could read it. Still don’t work. Digital clocks are everywhere else and in many ways more convenient.
Analog clocks are an obsolete decice whose time has passed. I also tried to keep it alive into the next generation but it’s not happening. It’s time to give it up.
Let that be one of our hallmarks as we age: the last generation with analog clocks. I use an analog face on my digital watch, have analog decorative clocks and I’ll accept that my kids believe that old fashioned (they do accept the analog clock face on my old car I gave them though, or maybe don’t know how to change it)
Eq0@literature.cafe 1 day ago
I also wonder: what’s the goal of teaching this? Sure, a cursory lesson is a good idea, but making it a fundamental step seems nonsensical in a world that doesn’t require it at all. It’s like teaching how to sharpen a quill, it’s not needed anymore
foodandart@lemmy.zip 1 day ago
NGL, wind up analog clocks are useful in places where the power goes out often. I have a 7-day grandfather clock and it’s been a godsend when northeasters turn into ice storms that take down the power for days…
(Northern New England had wretched winter weather some years)
bleistift2@sopuli.xyz 1 day ago
I don’t have a horse in this race, but your argument doesn’t hold up. If you want a way to tell the time during a power outage, you don’t need an analogue clock, you need one that runs on batteries.
papalonian@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I’m also horseless, but their analog clock is a wind-up, no batteries required. So if you’re snowed in and can’t get to the store, it’s one less thing that will take up batteries.
AA5B@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I’ve always wanted one of these but really only to remind me of my grandparents house from when I was a kid
olenkoVD@lemmy.dbzer0.com 15 hours ago
Of course it’s still needed. There still exist analog clocks almost everywhere. (At least in my country)
GlendatheGayWitch@lemmy.world 1 day ago
It’s an easy way to introduce fractions, especially since it’s common to hear/say it’s a quarter passed 2, half passed 5, and a quarter to 9.
Also teaches multiples, since the numbers on the clock represent multiples of 5.
Helps with directions, clockwise is when the hands spin to the right and counter-clockwise to the left. You’d be amazed how many students can’t tell their left from right.
MeThisGuy@feddit.nl 1 day ago
wtf? this goes back further than analogue clocks… we used to have a ribbon on one hand until we learned to distinguish right from left
GlendatheGayWitch@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I understand that learning left from right is a skill to learn. However, it was rare for a teenager to be unable to distinguish their left from right, unlike today.