EgonSpengler
Deity
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2014
- Messages
- 12,260
I have a colleague whose grasp of what seems like basic technology is poor, to be kind. They can barely use email or the photocopier/printer. Both of which they've been using everyday, as part of their job, for 25 years. They've just refused to learn even the basics. The other day, I had to show them how to change the name of a Word file.
Anyway, it got me to thinking about "life skills." As a kid, where I grew up, if you couldn't swim and ride a bicycle, you were behind the curve. As a teenager, we were expected to learn how to balance a checkbook and drive a stick, neither of which I ever became very proficient at, and would struggle to do at all today. Basic auto maintenance is more challenging than it used to be, and perhaps is no longer considered a mandatory skill if you own a car. I'm one of two people in my office who knows how to type, and I'm not sure that's a required skill anymore, even for people who work in an office. When I was in elementary school, we were taught handwriting, but my handwriting sucks now because I do it so infrequently.
If I had kids, swimming and riding a bike would be taught early. I'd be thinking about how to teach them to use the internet both responsibly and safely. Also how to understand the news. Basic financial skills; I wasn't taught [crap] about that stuff, when I was a kid. Basic computer skills. I don't know if driving is even crucial anymore, nevermind driving a standard, but I'd say my atrophied driving skills qualify as a life skills deficit now. Depends where you live, I guess, but the traffic around here is nasty, and God help you if you're a new driver, or from a place where drivers are polite and the streets aren't clogged. I literally almost got killed by a guy with California plates a few weeks ago, and I thought, "that dude probably just shouldn't be driving on the East Coast."
What would you say are necessary life skills today? For a kid, or for an adult, if they're different.
Anyway, it got me to thinking about "life skills." As a kid, where I grew up, if you couldn't swim and ride a bicycle, you were behind the curve. As a teenager, we were expected to learn how to balance a checkbook and drive a stick, neither of which I ever became very proficient at, and would struggle to do at all today. Basic auto maintenance is more challenging than it used to be, and perhaps is no longer considered a mandatory skill if you own a car. I'm one of two people in my office who knows how to type, and I'm not sure that's a required skill anymore, even for people who work in an office. When I was in elementary school, we were taught handwriting, but my handwriting sucks now because I do it so infrequently.
If I had kids, swimming and riding a bike would be taught early. I'd be thinking about how to teach them to use the internet both responsibly and safely. Also how to understand the news. Basic financial skills; I wasn't taught [crap] about that stuff, when I was a kid. Basic computer skills. I don't know if driving is even crucial anymore, nevermind driving a standard, but I'd say my atrophied driving skills qualify as a life skills deficit now. Depends where you live, I guess, but the traffic around here is nasty, and God help you if you're a new driver, or from a place where drivers are polite and the streets aren't clogged. I literally almost got killed by a guy with California plates a few weeks ago, and I thought, "that dude probably just shouldn't be driving on the East Coast."
What would you say are necessary life skills today? For a kid, or for an adult, if they're different.