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- Time Teacher version 1.1.4 ReadMe
-
- Time Teacher was written in 1990 to help my sons (Dan and Kevin) learn
- how to tell time. It displays a simple clock face with a random time and
- the child has to click in one of four buttons that show the time in
- decimal format. Clicking on the correct time makes a happy sound and
- shows a smiley clock face. Clicking on the incorrect time makes a sad
- sound, shows a sad clock and gives the kid another chance. Time Teacher
- will run on anything from a 512K to a PowerPC (I think). It has
- primitive graphics and sounds (to say the least) and is in black and
- white.
-
- Most clocks don't show numbers for the minute hand, and some don't even
- show numbers for the hour hand. I found it silly to try and explain to
- Dan that the minute hand points to invisible numbers that he had to
- memorize! Time Teacher provides repetitive exercises in reading an
- analog clock. The clock face is easy to read and has fat numbers for the
- fat hour hand, and skinny numbers for the skinny minute hand. The early
- levels of the game start with easy to read times (on the hour or
- half-hour). As the child correctly reads the time, the difficulty level
- automatically increases. The time displayed becomes harder to read (e.g.
- 5:55, 11:40, etc.) and the clock face looses its minute numbers and
- eventually the numbers for the hours. If a child has trouble with a
- level, the game will automatically decrease the level of difficulty.
-
- I don't try to get the kids to read time down to the minute. I never
- really care myself whether its 4:48 or 4:50, and I think that one of the
- beauties of an analog clock is the ability to approximate time.
- Unfortunately, Time Teacher does not help kids understand the concept of
- time or its passage. (Growing older is the best teacher ;-)
-
- At the request of a friend, John Smith, who works with disabled kids, I
- added the ability for Time Teacher to operate in Single Switching mode.
- In this mode, the mouse does not have to be moved to click in the
- buttons. The buttons are highlighted in sequence to give the child a
- chance to click using either a stationary mouse, or a Single Switching
- device.
-
- When I first wrote Time Teacher, I used it as a way to learn how to
- program on the Macintosh. Although I intended to enhance Time Teacher to
- include color, speech, more sounds and pictures, it never really
- happened. I still hope to find the time to add the features I've always
- thought about, but ╔
-
- Harry Wolfson
- wolfson@ll.mit.edu
- 29 December 1993
-