13 More Things NOT Found in Schools Anymore…That We Miss!

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  • Опубліковано 24 чер 2023
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,7 тис.

  • @robertaccornero7172
    @robertaccornero7172 Рік тому +485

    Remember those hand cranked pencil sharpeners that were screwed in a wall?

    • @MagdaleneDivine
      @MagdaleneDivine Рік тому +13

      I possess one of those.
      Right now it's sitting on my shelf

    • @speedracer1945
      @speedracer1945 Рік тому +7

      They don't still have them ??

    • @chuckwadnofski7147
      @chuckwadnofski7147 Рік тому +6

      ​@speedracer1945 most kids today don't have a clue what they're for.

    • @susanvan1672
      @susanvan1672 Рік тому +13

      Yes, I have one of those pencil sharpeners near the back door of my house. It's kind of a little phone Nook. A small Shelf where the phone would rest. Even those things are a dinosaur and no longer are necessary. It used to be that our phone was tied to the wall. Now we are tied to the phone.😢

    • @incog99skd11
      @incog99skd11 Рік тому +2

      @@susanvan1672 We had an electric one at home.

  • @dennythomas8887
    @dennythomas8887 Рік тому +627

    Some of the other things that are missing from schools now, Industrial Arts classes like metal shop, machine shop, wood shop, electronics and auto shop. Also Home Economics, Cooking, Sewing and fashion, (a favorite with the girls, they made dresses and shirts of their own design) Basically any class that had anything to do with using your hands to build and create things using your imagination and problem solving skills is gone. They also stopped teaching Civics class where we learned how city, county, state and Federal governments work. My wife and I went to High School from 72 to 76 and man how things have changed.

    • @duckduckgoismuchbetter
      @duckduckgoismuchbetter Рік тому +25

      You are so right! 👍❤️

    • @betsyj59
      @betsyj59 Рік тому +47

      Also typing and orchestra and art classes.

    • @speedracer1945
      @speedracer1945 Рік тому +19

      Wood class , metal shop and wood shop honed for future skills if you were good with your hands as the other stuff for girls .

    • @besttimes3248
      @besttimes3248 Рік тому +30

      High school 72' to 75' here, I had all of these, we also had a class called bachelor living were they taught the guys how to tell cuts of meat, cook, lite sewing and things a single man would need to know. The only thing we made to eat was beef jerky. We also had swimming and auto shop, you are so right things have really changed.

    • @toolsteel8482
      @toolsteel8482 Рік тому +18

      My high school had a nice metal shop. It had four or five lathes, a milling machine, shaper, drill presses & etc. The best part was the crucible for melting brass and aluminum and sand molds for casting.

  • @SeaTurtle515
    @SeaTurtle515 Рік тому +66

    How I absolutely loved covering my textbooks with brown paper bags at the beginning of the school year. And draw and doodle on those covers throughout the year.

  • @jojomarieco954
    @jojomarieco954 Рік тому +90

    Don’t forget……Morals, Values, Respect, Good Manners, Modest Clothing, Patriotism….I could go on for hours, you get the point.

    • @dylanput
      @dylanput 6 місяців тому +4

      Yeah but you're just saying this because it's true ;)

    • @KMFDM_Kid2000
      @KMFDM_Kid2000 6 місяців тому

      Morals - Don't be a dick.
      Values - Don't be a dick. Be yourself. But not a dick.
      Respect - given to those that earn it by not being dicks.
      Modest Clothing - wear what you want. Those that judge by appearance are dicks.
      Patriotism - Fuck that noise. That's fascist-speak. Respect your communities and the people in them, but nationalism is stupid and America was never founded on honest, good principles, but was stolen and raped away from its original inhabitants. Always speak truth to power, and stand up to bullies, ESPECIALLY those waving imperialistic flags they're proud of.
      That's how I raised my kids and they're all 3 successful, and great at what they do. And none of them are dicks.

    • @lilliedoubleyou3865
      @lilliedoubleyou3865 6 місяців тому +3

      They’re making a comeback in certain charter schools ❤

    • @Rick_King
      @Rick_King 6 місяців тому +2

      Yes! We learned My Country 'tis of Thee and American the Beautiful and The Star Spangled Banner and others!

    • @2Bluzin
      @2Bluzin 5 місяців тому +5

      But also with that came racism, sexism and homophobia. It's a wash.

  • @annettekazmierczak8017
    @annettekazmierczak8017 Рік тому +212

    Another thing that has disappeared is the film projector. We always got excited when we came into class and saw the projector. Also, it was fun when the teacher would run the film backwards.

    • @boggy7665
      @boggy7665 Рік тому +8

      lol - projector? I can take a nap.

    • @Drew-bc7zj
      @Drew-bc7zj Рік тому +7

      Or the overhead projector (less fun) which meant you were going to be copying notes until your wrist hurt.
      If you weren't a fast writer it was a struggle to keep up!

    • @JOHN----DOE
      @JOHN----DOE Рік тому +7

      And the overhead projector! I got what's now a grad school's worth of history education on those things.

    • @kendallevans4079
      @kendallevans4079 Рік тому +2

      Did any of those actually work right? I remember the teacher trying to thread the darn thing and you had a to make a "loop" at some point and that NEVER worked right

    • @boggy7665
      @boggy7665 Рік тому +5

      @@kendallevans4079 Especially if it was an old print & had splices & torn sprocket holes

  • @hollyking2580
    @hollyking2580 Рік тому +170

    1980s kid here. I feel bad for today's youth. What do they have today that will of sentimental value to them in 20, 30 years? Book covers, Trapper Keepers, school libraries... Seemingly ordinary things that we took for granted and never thought would disappear. Tons of memories flooding back. TY for this video!

    • @GeeEm1313
      @GeeEm1313 Рік тому +3

      I had a Countach Trapper Keeper. Of course, it fell apart after a few months.
      Also, in 6th grade, I ended up breaking an analog clock out of anger and my mom had to pay to replace it. My mom would make my book covers for me and I'd skip class in the library. The lunch ladies were not friendly back in Maryland, but the cashier in middle school was cool.

    • @brian70Cuda
      @brian70Cuda Рік тому +2

      The kids of today will miss out on so much, 80's kid here too. As a gear head, there are not cars out in fields to go play with, how I spent most of my childhood. 50's and 60's cars..dime a dosen.

    • @chuckwadnofski7147
      @chuckwadnofski7147 Рік тому +5

      Can't tell time unless digital, assaulting teachers, fat kids, etc. So much better today🤨

    • @adorabledeplorable5105
      @adorabledeplorable5105 Рік тому +11

      I graduated in 1970 ; and personally I believe kids of today have no idea of what they are missing from the simple days .

    • @nancymcmonarch
      @nancymcmonarch Рік тому +2

      We had little cardboard school boxes for pencils and whatnot when I was in elementary school. Never formed any sentimental attachments to them. And every school I've taught in, this century btw, has had a library, complete with rows of computers where kids can do research and print out their homework assignments. Is anyone really nostalgic for using the card catalog when you had a research project to complete, then run around the library looking for ten different books, only to find that most of them had been checked out? Not me!

  • @Azrahns
    @Azrahns Рік тому +41

    It's been a long time since then but the old fashioned pencil sharpeners and the smell of the ditto machine that odd purple ink print out comes to mind. It does take you back in many ways.

    • @dragondancer1814
      @dragondancer1814 5 місяців тому +2

      Anybody else flash back to the sight and smell of that purple ink when McGee found the old ditto machine in the NCIS basement during the “Power Down” episode?

    • @gloriousjohnson1807
      @gloriousjohnson1807 5 місяців тому +2

      ​@@dragondancer1814: Carbon copies

    • @nonelost1
      @nonelost1 5 місяців тому

      So many ditto copies were hard to read. They didn't always copy very well.

    • @dragondancer1814
      @dragondancer1814 5 місяців тому

      @@nonelost1 You have to admit, it was fun when dirt or other stuff on the original copy got copied by the ditto machine-it made for some very interesting random purple spots at times!

  • @nancyberry1039
    @nancyberry1039 Рік тому +28

    Not just the faculty had designated smoking areas, but the students too. I went to several high schools in the early to mid 80's (my dad was in the military) & each one had a smoking spots for the high school kids. It was outside, usually set back away from the main campus such as behind the "shop" classes or the gym, on the far side of the sports field or just off campus (back when we could leave during lunch and go to a nearby 7-11 or gas station for snacks & sodas). I remember one junior high or middle school as they are called now, had a smoking area next to an overflow parking lot for those who started their nicotine addictions at an early age. LOL - crazy times they were, but fun too!

    • @theboyisnotright6312
      @theboyisnotright6312 6 місяців тому

      As a smoker I know how bad smoking is for your health. But man I do like it! And if smoking is so bad for your health, why is it now that smoking rates are 20% down from 50% life expectation is dropping?😂😂

    • @mikeobryant7274
      @mikeobryant7274 5 місяців тому

      The smoking area when I was in high school was for students and teachers. Yeah, they took smoke breaks together

    • @qolspony
      @qolspony 5 місяців тому

      We smoked in what was called a vestibule. The teachers smoke right with us. Only high school students could smoke. This was the mid 1980s.

  • @madmike2624
    @madmike2624 Рік тому +166

    Also, home economics was a class. They taught you how to balance a check book, cook, sew, etc. so many life skills that today's kids have no idea how to perform!

    • @GeeEm1313
      @GeeEm1313 Рік тому +7

      Our home ec didn't have the check balancing part, but that would have been neat if it did. We did have a class called Consumer Math which did teach that, among other things

    • @floralbouquets
      @floralbouquets Рік тому +8

      We learned the checkbook stuff in business math class...home ec was cooking and sewing

    • @zacharyrome3432
      @zacharyrome3432 Рік тому +1

      Literally nothing more important to learn !

    • @incog99skd11
      @incog99skd11 Рік тому +8

      The home ec teacher came into the art class and stole my water colors. The teacher would give me a note saying the other teacher had to have my painting and gave me an A+. I would rather have had my painting. Even at that age I was really good. I became a professional artist later.

    • @sallyintucson
      @sallyintucson Рік тому +7

      I went to a boarding school on a working cattle ranch in AZ. No home economics (which we could have really used) but I can muck out a stall and take care of horses (and of course ride) like nobody’s business.

  • @tonycollazorappo
    @tonycollazorappo Рік тому +48

    Wow, I miss all this :( I often wish that I could go back in time when life was simpler and people appreciated each other.

    • @boggy7665
      @boggy7665 Рік тому +5

      Just don't say 'gay'

  • @anthonysaunders345
    @anthonysaunders345 Рік тому +37

    I was born in 1971, and I remember every example here like it was yesterday. They say that of all the senses, smell is actually the most closely tied to memory evocation. Freshly-cut grass can be found anywhere, but it brings me back to suburban Toronto as a kid. I took swim lessons from an early age and eventually became a lifeguard and swim instructor. Chlorine always reminds me of the fun I had, especially in the summer, in the 80s and 90s. And, as mentioned here, the smell of books. Libraries the reliquaries of unfathomable and endless information, and had a distinct smell I rarely experience anymore in the age of digital book downloading.

    • @Squee_Dow
      @Squee_Dow Рік тому +1

      100% agree. When they showed those kids in the library, I relived the smell of our little library. It was an old house that had been turned into a library, and one of the best parts of going was to breathe in that smell.

    • @javiermori1710
      @javiermori1710 Рік тому +1

      Also born in 71.. i feel ya my friend. The chlorine smell i def can relate. I remember every pool you always had the thought of " does this pool have too much chlorine"? If it did your hair would turn green or blue i dont remember. Fun memories.😊

    • @russellbonds3842
      @russellbonds3842 7 місяців тому +2

      Born in ‘71 as well. I always feel bad that my daughters (17 and 19) didn’t get to grow up in the world that we did. I’d go back and live in an 80’s loop forever.

    • @tawnyh8878
      @tawnyh8878 6 місяців тому

      Me too I was a year after you 72 and I remember every single one of these examples I remember standing up for the pledge of legions

  • @michaelminton1224
    @michaelminton1224 Рік тому +24

    Another thing is field trips. Back then a class would take a trip on a school bus to a historical place to expand learning. Now today due to high costs and limited class time, students are now at school all the time moving from room to room for each subject every 45 minutes ending all field trips.

    • @bodybuilderslave7125
      @bodybuilderslave7125 6 місяців тому +1

      my class trips went to factories, one of tv stations, etc

    • @sgabig
      @sgabig 5 місяців тому +2

      I went to a field trip to a dairy farm in elementary school & they gave each of us ice cream in those little plastic cups with wooden spoons 🥄 🍨

    • @chadhOneAtl
      @chadhOneAtl 5 місяців тому +2

      ??? My daughter’s school have gone to 3 field trips. It was only during Covid that this stopped temporarily but resumed last year.

    • @qolspony
      @qolspony 5 місяців тому

      We did this a lot. Even high school did this. Sometimes the school bus. Sometimes the subway. And especially summer school. Things were better than.

    • @2Bluzin
      @2Bluzin 5 місяців тому

      I work at an Aquarium in a big city, we have school buses arrive almost every day during the week.

  • @joannamcpeak7531
    @joannamcpeak7531 Рік тому +341

    A school without bells, libraries, and Globes sounds just awful 🥺

    • @kathymcel
      @kathymcel Рік тому +10

      Our schools have all these things in NY. My kids had books just 2 years ago. Text books and library books.

    • @marilyntaylor9577
      @marilyntaylor9577 Рік тому +9

      Santa brought me a globe in grade school (1950’s). Wow.

    • @glennso47
      @glennso47 Рік тому +9

      My grandkids know nothing about the Constitution or other documents that were written during the founding of this country. I got them pocket copies of the Constitution and instructed them to read it. And if they have questions they should ask.

    • @nancymcmonarch
      @nancymcmonarch Рік тому +6

      Globes, along with the old pull-down maps, began going out of fashion with the fall of the Soviet Union back in the 90s and the increasing turmoil on the African continent. Due to the multicolored ink and the need for strict accuracy, globes and maps were surprisingly expensive to produce. With borders and country names changing so rapidly, a brand new globe could become inaccurate or obsolete in a matter of months. It simply became untenable to keep producing them, especially when students and teachers have instant access to what the world looks like right this minute.

    • @-Subtle-
      @-Subtle- Рік тому +3

      And fake af.

  • @NASCARFAN93100
    @NASCARFAN93100 Рік тому +67

    Recollection Road is The GOAT at giving us a trip down memory lane

    • @user-uc4pf2rt4j
      @user-uc4pf2rt4j Рік тому +2

      Indeed!

    • @mikeywid4954
      @mikeywid4954 Рік тому

      I could not have said it better. Kudos to Recollection Road.

    • @SJHFoto
      @SJHFoto Рік тому

      What does "the goat" mean? I've heard it before, but never understood the expression

    • @NASCARFAN93100
      @NASCARFAN93100 Рік тому

      @@SJHFoto GOAT stands for: Greatest Of All Time

  • @dwderp
    @dwderp Рік тому +159

    “Remember lugging around those heavy backpacks filled with textbooks?” Nope. Believe it or not, there was a time when backpacks were absolutely unseen in schools. Literally, nobody had them. Instead, we carried our books under our arm. Can you imagine carrying an actual stack of loose books with your hands? That’s how we did it in the 1970s. Older generations tied the stack of books together with a bookstrap. 🤓

    • @polyrhythmia
      @polyrhythmia Рік тому +22

      The girls would cradle their books like they would a baby, and the boys would carry their books by their hips.

    • @Mick_Ts_Chick
      @Mick_Ts_Chick Рік тому +15

      Yep, class of 82 here. Only college students had book bags/backpacks then. Never saw them in public schools I went to.

    • @tamedshrew235
      @tamedshrew235 10 місяців тому +4

      The older kids carried their books lower grade kids used book bags with pockets to stick your lunch sandwhich in. Some kids had lunch boxes of metal with a thermos. The Batman lunch box was hugely popular.

    • @burleybater
      @burleybater 10 місяців тому +5

      Up to grade three this was the case with me.
      From grade 4 on, I used my father's army knapsack, or rucksack, depending.
      Starting grade nine, I used a genuine Gladstone bag.
      Also, books were arranged on a long clipboard, stacked like bricks, and carried on the hip. Right-handed...left hip. Retractable pens carried in a floppy vest pocket. A compass set for math - wedged in between a couple of books.
      Multiple trips to lockers between classes to ditch things we didn't need.
      My high school was civilized. Each class length was 45 minutes. You had a good 10-15 minutes to make up the top of the hour and the next class. Lots of time.
      You're right though. The ubiquitous backpack hardly existed until much later. My son started school in the late 1980s, and by then the backpack had arrived.
      But the main reason for the knapsack by grade four - was that I was a sworn bookworm, and school library books as well as regular library books were my constant companions.
      As to textbooks through those elementary grades? School spellers, grammars and math workbooks were skinny little things. The giant geography and history books were things we never had to lug around. They stayed in our desks.

    • @karenalbeck4043
      @karenalbeck4043 10 місяців тому +1

      Right, I thought that as well. In elementary school, we used book bags that were like little suitcases and often came with a matching lunchbox. Jr/Sr high school, we carried an armload of books and if we brought our lunches, we used paper bags.

  • @hangingwiththegrlz4891
    @hangingwiththegrlz4891 Рік тому +20

    You are correct. I am a Elementary Teacher. Children still love lunch time. Books are coming back because the districts are noticing the ineffectiveness of just using a laptop (students off task on different sites), but the books are usually to stay in the class. Teacher breaks are shorter, we use our planning time for meetings 2-3 days a week (awful). I really miss globes and pull down maps to teach. Some schools do not even have Art or Music anymore. I really miss home economics, my children were not offered this class. I really loved home economics, (cooking, sewing and learning about family nutrition)

    • @debbiefabro887
      @debbiefabro887 6 місяців тому +1

      We made an outfit in sewing class. At end of the year we had a fashion show. Loved sewing & cooking. We actually had a room with several stoves to cook on. Can't beat chocolate chip cookies made at school & we got to eat them. Kids Don't know how to crack an egg nowadays 😢.

    • @user-cm6lg5eo9x
      @user-cm6lg5eo9x 3 місяці тому

      Um, you made a grammatical error - you typed “a Elementary Teacher” when you should have typed ‘an elementary teacher’ .

  • @ernestcruz6316
    @ernestcruz6316 Рік тому +78

    I graduated in 1978 so I never had a Trapper Keeper, but they came out in the mid '70s so I knew they existed. I just never felt like I needed one. I wonder if today's kids even know how to tell time by the hands of a clock. I know many children have no idea what the phrases "quarter to five," or "half past two" mean.

    • @deborahpellerito6117
      @deborahpellerito6117 Рік тому +5

      They don't it's all digital

    • @SarahMichelle777
      @SarahMichelle777 Рік тому +7

      I teach my kindergarteners how to tell time on an analog clock.

    • @JayTor2112
      @JayTor2112 Рік тому +3

      Quarter and half is math, math class is about crt and gender now.

    • @ilovegoodsax
      @ilovegoodsax Рік тому +5

      ​@@JayTor2112CRT courses are only found at universities and in law school, not K-12.

    • @ernestcruz6316
      @ernestcruz6316 Рік тому

      @@SarahMichelle777 That makes you a good teacher. By all means, keep doing it that way.

  • @brettany_renee_blatchley
    @brettany_renee_blatchley Рік тому +119

    I was well-behaved in school, but there was one time in 11th grade when I played a mild prank with a firecracker. My punishment was cleaning the loooooong inside wall at the entrance of the school, where pretty-much everyone passed-by. (I was horrified!) Looking back, I think the punishment fit the crime, and I still think very highly of the principal. And yes, he had a paddle in 1978.

    • @jenniferhansen3622
      @jenniferhansen3622 Рік тому +12

      I hope you learned your lesson!!! 😆😉🤗

    • @YesYou-zy7kp
      @YesYou-zy7kp Рік тому +8

      I remember when I was in 2nd grade (around 1970) and while at recess I didn't follow the rules. The rule was once the bell rang, everyone stopped doing what they were doing and to stand still. The teacher would blow the whistle and the girls would go first. Then she would blow the whistle again and the boys would then go to their class. I made the mistake of accidentally moving on the first whistle. My teacher made me stand in line with the girls. Are you reading this Ms. Blakely?

    • @jenniferhansen3622
      @jenniferhansen3622 Рік тому +4

      @@YesYou-zy7kp Haha!! I remember when I was in 3rd grade (1985) and my friends and I had been out at recess sitting under a tree in the far end of the playground. Well, we didn't hear when the bell rang so we didn't go in from recess on time. Somebody was sent outside to come and find us. Anyway, we missed out on a treat that day, fresh pineapple. The mother of one of my classmates had brought fresh pineapple for our class to enjoy in the afternoon. My friends & I were not allowed to have any. Not a major punishment, but we were disappointed. 🍍

    • @laureencriss8220
      @laureencriss8220 Рік тому +3

      ​@@YesYou-zy7kpYes. I was really well-behaved in school too. But my brothers described the paddle with the holes. It scared me to death. I ended up working in the office in the 6th grade for an hour during lunch. As volunteers, we worked the switchboard, helped kids into the nurse's office, etc. I also witnessed the principle grabbing that paddle out of a cabinet drawer for when naughty kids came in for punishment. 6th grade--1977

    • @sonyafox3271
      @sonyafox3271 Рік тому +3

      I was within a few months from graduating mid term and, my guidance counselor decided he was going to make some trouble for me since, another person was in trouble he decided he would accuse me of the similar things he was taking this other student for, he didn’t like where, I was from. I warned this guy, what, I was going to do when, he started in on me. I knew he didn’t like it because, I had came from the school district that was that’s schools number one enemy. So, he wanted to go on about these false allegations. And, I cussed him out. I only talked to a few other people what had happened! My mom never got one phone call and, never really saw or heard anything from that guidance counselor ever again.

  • @joshuaburba1048
    @joshuaburba1048 Рік тому +37

    As someone who has taught for the last 11 years, I found this very interesting.
    But one thing that stood out to me were the mistakes. For example, every school and classroom that I have worked in have all had analog clocks on the walls, not digital. I'm not implying that means every school has them, but don't worry, plenty of kids are still learning how to tell time on those.
    Also, I absolutely agree with your point about students not carrying textbooks anymore because everything is digital, and I HATE this practice.
    Last year alone, I can't count the number of times the internet was down or they couldn't log onto their digital textbooks, and they never had a hard copy to fall back on.
    Going to all digital textbooks was, in my opinion, the worst idea ever.
    Thank you for making this. Oh, and as a kid I LOVED my Trapper Keeper.

    • @manga12
      @manga12 7 місяців тому

      @@DosBear but so does their abillity to change the information when it dont suite them or they feel the need to hide that inconvinent artical from a 100 year old song or book that dont fit the modern narritive, or articals written by interviewing the actual people themselves when written, and there is the whole issue of how our brain takes the information on the computer in vs reading on paper, also change in software and lack of intergenerational compatabillity affect info to get something from an old piece of tech vs just picking up the book for some research, and what happens if we get hit with an emp snap the electronics are fried and the information stored on them irretreavable.
      there is need still of some hard copies of things, or drawing by hand on paper or physical media vs computer though yes there is much more you can do at once with a digital drawing tablet but nothing beats sometimes drawing by hand helps with coordnation in kids or people, and just cuz something is old dont mean its no good, there are some things that have their place and do it well in niche applications.

    • @manga12
      @manga12 7 місяців тому

      @@DosBear well there is some topics one should tread carefully with when introducing, depends who you ask though. especially deeper subjects like psychology it takes a more tempered approach for more then the basics, or philosophy certain things can breed dangeous ideas and justifications for behavior if the persons mind is no ready to fully understand or the whole subject, that is you have to crawl before you can walk, and some ideas can lead to a justification of things like unhealthy behaviors, violence, and all kinds of immorality and unethical things.

    • @manga12
      @manga12 7 місяців тому

      @@DosBear some things though as I said take a more tempered approach to fully understand

    • @manga12
      @manga12 7 місяців тому

      @@DosBear ok well for example you wouldn't want to full on teach a questionable theory in gender studies from a collage senior level class when its qustionable among even some researchers to middleschoolers they are still trying to figure out who they are and going though enough changes and figuring out the more advanced basics of the human body, you would not need one of the more tenious thorys being taught that maybe questionable at best to them if their brain dont have the background yet or maturity to handle it, or teaching unfettered utilitarianism, if it feels good do it, that can lead to all kind of justifications to do stuff like drugs, and crime, selfishness that dont benifit society as a whole, without teaching them to temper it the kind of feels good go for it attitude being taught without restraint can be dangerous, for example, or teaching pure hate of something without the other side of the story is bad, even in catholic school we learned about other faiths and peoples all over the world and what philosphys differant cultures espoused thought history, like the greeks and romans, the persians, a little bit about various native american groups and especially a bit about the nations that were in indiana historically when studying state history, we weren't taught to hate but to understand how this was differant then what we belived, as christians.
      there is a time and place to discuss things and prudence is to be used, and both sides of a topic at least mentioned

    • @manga12
      @manga12 7 місяців тому

      @@DosBear the truth is the truth even if one refuses to belive it, what I am trying to say is some knowlege is dangerous, while I dont advocate burning books, there is some that dont need to be brought front and center, that is more advanced, to one that is just learning something, case and point you would not want a book about bomb making in a highschool library to get reached by someone thats being bullied or hates school now would you, or or someone that hates school and has a vendetta. much depends on context, on the other hand you could talk about chemistry reactions in chemistry or sciance, once they reach that class level, depends on context, a five year old dont need to know the ins and outs of sex and how to plesure others when they ask where babys come from or all the gross details of child birth or how a csection works in detail, a 13 year old may be another story about the processies about how the body works and its interworkings.

  • @nbenefiel
    @nbenefiel Рік тому +13

    I changed from Catholic to
    Public High Schools. The curricula didn’t match so I was put in a home economics class. I learned how to cook, sew and design my own clothes. All through the 60’s I made fantastic hippie clothes, velvet vests, long satin gowns. I didn’t have much money but I had incredible clothes

  • @jenniferhansen3622
    @jenniferhansen3622 Рік тому +72

    I have six analog clocks in my house. One in my bedroom, one in the dining room, one in the family room, one in the living room, and one in each bathroom. I can't imagine not having them on the walls.

    • @MelvisVelour
      @MelvisVelour Рік тому +5

      They also got so out of synch with each other you'd leave one classroom at 9AM and walk into the neighboring room at 1:37PM

    • @jenniferhansen3622
      @jenniferhansen3622 Рік тому +6

      ​@@MelvisVelourhahahahaha! As a matter of fact, I think the one in my upstairs bathroom is off right now. I think it's about an hour and 10 minutes off. Thanks for reminding me to put a new battery in it.😂

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 Рік тому +3

      The reason they went digital is the analogs ticked too loud for some sensitive ears. Drove kids crazy. Like water torture, drip drip drip.

    • @keithbrown7685
      @keithbrown7685 Рік тому +1

      ​@@MelvisVelour This is eery. You were time traveling. : )

    • @keithbrown7685
      @keithbrown7685 Рік тому +4

      @@jenniferhansen3622 Electric clocks were the norm when I was growing up, school and home. I miss them.
      I miss the old alarm clocks like I used to have. They were made of metal and wound up and their sound could *not* be ignored by the sleeper. I still wish they were around. Nothing says getting up like an alarm clock with a metal case and a winding key. : )

  • @carolblais3071
    @carolblais3071 Рік тому +17

    I am 86 years and I remembe each classroom had a portrait of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln on the wall. I enjoy your videos so much. thanks

  • @katecampbell3074
    @katecampbell3074 Рік тому +12

    I have no idea what’s going on in other schools, but my kids still have/do a lot of these things. Analog clocks in classrooms, books for different subjects, full libraries, globes, dressing out for PE, playing Dodgeball.

    • @markbonner1139
      @markbonner1139 9 місяців тому +2

      DON'T SPREAD THAT AROUND!!! ENOUGH THINGS ARE EXTICT!!!

    • @Rick_King
      @Rick_King 6 місяців тому +2

      Your kids are very lucky!

    • @FUGP72
      @FUGP72 6 місяців тому

      Most of this list is pure bullshit.

    • @user-cm6lg5eo9x
      @user-cm6lg5eo9x 10 днів тому

      Unfortunately, people have banned books.

  • @laurachristianson1688
    @laurachristianson1688 Рік тому +12

    For me it is the library where I volunteered to inhabit, to hide from the mean girls as much as I could. Was a pretty good one too, we actually had a media room (circa 1974)….it was my first introduction to microphish ( early sort of data collection) and so much more. I was into it before anyone knew what it was. The second was the rope climbing….I was the only one in my gym class in junior high that could climb to the top….there you have it a physically advanced nerd. 🎉

  • @RishayanPorMexico
    @RishayanPorMexico Рік тому +86

    When I went to school in the 60s, teachers could still show affection( God forbid) for their young students. A pat on the back, or an arm around the shoulder were much needed reassurement that you were doing your lessons correctly. I remember my behavioral science teacher giving me a ride home in her private vehicle after I needed to discuss with her some things I was confused about in our studies. Today, many schools have become a cold, cold, prison like environment, with guards at the door and with absolutely no touching or any form of personal concern to be shown to individual students. Any wonder that according to the childrens hospital of the Univ. Of Michigan, 30% of 10th graders and almost 50% of 12th graders have tried marijuana, something just about unheard of when I was in high school in the 60s( at least in my suburban school). Progress is not always a good thing. Good Video!

    • @betsyj59
      @betsyj59 Рік тому +12

      You reminded me of a newspaper article published in the early-ish 2000s about an incident in Killeen TX (I think) - a little 5 year old boy ran up to his teacher, hugged her and lay his head on her bosom (she was very big and he was very small). The school sent a. letter to the parents about how their son had sexually harassed his teacher. Unbelievable.

    • @RishayanPorMexico
      @RishayanPorMexico Рік тому +9

      @@betsyj59 I know...this type of innocence happens almost every day somewhere in the US. Schools( as well as hospitals) have now become scary, and even dangerous places to be, not because of the students or patients, but because of the illogical, ridiculous and downright inhumane rules and regulations put forth by the administrators. It's so, so sad. I'm just glad that I'm an old man, on my way out!

    • @eugenescotti8874
      @eugenescotti8874 Рік тому +6

      Two of my teachers in high school, who both grew up with my Father, also had a personal impact on me. One gave me a ride home when I had no money for the train and did it to teach about displaying concern for others, and the other, well..........he rushed my desk during prayer (catholic school) because I laughed and forcingly told me to show some respect. Many would say that that was "abusive", but it's meant to teach you about rules and etiquette in life; "there's a time and a place". Years later, I still carry many of these lessons and apply them to my life today. Oh, and when I told my father about the teacher who rushed me, and why, and who he was in relation to him, his response was, "good!, you probably deserved it..." 😇

    • @-Subtle-
      @-Subtle- Рік тому +1

      We still do show affection.
      You're full of ssss.

    • @CatholicTraditional
      @CatholicTraditional Рік тому +4

      At my grammar school graduation 20 yrs ago, I got a hug from the principal while walking across the stage. 😊

  • @Chilly_Billy
    @Chilly_Billy Рік тому +326

    As the father of two, a 15- and 17- year old, I can assure you the electronic/internet-based education is in no way as effective as old fashioned text books. The lack of knowledge my children have acquired compared to what I and their mother learned is in some ways astonishing. We live in a "better" school district that is well-funded and staffed, so it's not for lack of resources. It's very, very sad.

    • @heathjohnson2575
      @heathjohnson2575 Рік тому +28

      I 100% agree and my wife is a teacher. School is terrible now.

    • @marilyntaylor9577
      @marilyntaylor9577 Рік тому +15

      I taught a long time ago, the college I went to had been a Teacher’s College before becoming a university. They put a lot of emphasis on how to teach.

    • @bekindtoanimals2189
      @bekindtoanimals2189 Рік тому

      You young whippersnapper STILL think you know everything! (Kidding)
      Why, you didn't even have good 'ol sock hops! Now THAT was helium!
      ua-cam.com/video/zTPWWPeWj9Q/v-deo.html

    • @noirekuroraigami2270
      @noirekuroraigami2270 Рік тому +3

      Bro during COVID you were suppose to teach your own children. Like what kind of parent are you

    • @garryratke7640
      @garryratke7640 Рік тому +6

      In gym class those boys you showed in there gym uniform were probably forced to shower defore they got to put their regular clothes on

  • @LLjean-qz7sb
    @LLjean-qz7sb Рік тому +21

    The kids of today don't play outside or do many physical things like we used to do and therefore we were strong enough to carry all those textbooks, even from a young age!

    • @bluestorm9651
      @bluestorm9651 Рік тому +1

      I am glad too. In my neighborhood all they did was go around looking for trouble, breaking windows and stealing stuff.

    • @richa.s9912
      @richa.s9912 Рік тому +2

      My mom bought me a big backpack 🎒 and I joined in Boy Scout in 5 grades public schools elementary school to grade 7 ages 12 to 14 and learning how to carrying heavy load of clothes and first aid and camping gear and fishing gear and sleeping bag and tent but I was a Quarter master since I can carry heavy loads of cooking supplies and food while others boy scout carrying tents and so on stuffs needed and I learned about carrying my books and paperwork in my homemade jeans material back pack just for books and homework and stuff in my sewing machine classes in public Jr. Highschool grade 7 to 8 grade and have cooking classes also in 1977 to 1979 it called Home Education. My Jr. Highschool has also have wood work shops and metal shop and U.S. history classes and World History classes and reading classes and social studies class math classes weights lifting class and volleyball and tennis courts and soccer game and basketball and baseball and field and track running field and football and archery 🏹 bows and arrows and golfing class and swimming pool and public schools kindergarten through highschool has had Prayer and Pledge to the America flag and does teach about bible historical facts but not religious stuff we used World History classes for understanding about overseas countries people studies of Why pyramid and Egyptian and Arabic and Europe and China dictatorship and studies about U.S. history of Demoncrats Party's KKKLAN Klu Klux klan white supremacists Neo-Nazis inventers who invented the Racist bigotry Race Baiters to intimidate to torture and lying about everything and to killing innocent American black and white Republican Party people in America since 1866 . And studies about Real American people invented the REAL American Republican Party invented Organized in 1854 to oppose to eliminate all the Demoncrats Party's Slavery extension and freeing the black slave Plantations a Demoncrats Party's KKKLAN White Supremacists Plantation owns black slave. Republican Party : was a Anti-Slavery 1854 and President Lincoln has been exposing the Demoncrats Party people as Fascism, They are the Party of lying and Enslavement and Tyranny and Promoting LIES and Promoting ENSLAVEMENT and Promoting TYRANNY against the REAL American black and white Republican Party people in America since 1860 . Demoncrats Party people have Soo much hatred towards President Lincoln has freeing black slave Plantations and giving black people and kids freedom to be whatever they want to be. And Demoncrats Party people was Soo mad still at President Lincoln and President Reagan and President Trump for having American black and white and brown and yellow and red innocent poor regular people freedom of amendment Right laws of choice to be free speech and Amendment Rights LAWS to vote for whoever we wanted to.

    • @LLjean-qz7sb
      @LLjean-qz7sb Рік тому

      @@richa.s9912 Sounds like you, like I, have had a very wellrounded education, both in and out of the classroom! Wish the kids of today could experience just a little bit, of growing up in the early 20th century! What an eye opener they would have! Thank you for your insightful response! God Bless (born in 1950)

    • @dad7493
      @dad7493 5 місяців тому

      It's almost like you covered all the areas where we could play outside with fucking stroads and asphalt

  • @jstringfellow1961
    @jstringfellow1961 Рік тому +25

    Wow, really good stuff. We said the Pledge every day, and we wrote in cursive. Those things I absolutely remember. We'd gather in the open areas and sing songs each morning before school started and say the pledge. We had a school prayer too. I know it may seem crazy, but we didn't have the drama, shootings, and/or fighting and really bad characters we have today.

    • @user-de1hg8cf6b
      @user-de1hg8cf6b 6 місяців тому +1

      Exactly 👍. We should go back to those days. Morning prayer and if there are anyone that doesn't want to pray 🙏 or hear the prayer 🙏 they can wait outside of the prayer circle.

  • @GeorgieB1965
    @GeorgieB1965 Рік тому +37

    I remember the "official" and "unofficial" smoking areas at my high school quite well. All of them outdoors and students always came back smelling of smoke (mostly).

    • @Canalcoholic
      @Canalcoholic Рік тому +3

      No, there were a few boys’ toilets in our school which held a permanent fog bank.

    • @julenepegher6999
      @julenepegher6999 Рік тому +3

      In the morning we smoked outside, not just cigarettes, then once in school it was in the bathrooms between classes. 😆

    • @stevecollins2806
      @stevecollins2806 Рік тому +2

      My high school had a smoking area. It was the back wing of the school. During lunch break, those of us who smoked would pass the time smoking while we drank a can of Coke and ate a bag of chips

    • @Mick_Ts_Chick
      @Mick_Ts_Chick Рік тому +1

      Our school had a smoking area in the courtyard. We only had juniors and seniors so everyone was legal to smoke cause the age then was 17.

    • @GeorgieB1965
      @GeorgieB1965 Рік тому

      @@Canalcoholic That was a bit tougher to do at ours. Between the hall monitors and the teachers, it was easier/safer to go outside.

  • @andeeharry
    @andeeharry Рік тому +27

    I loved creating book covers for my school books, it was so fun. I often used rough wallpaper for it to stand out.

    • @janinewetzler5037
      @janinewetzler5037 Рік тому +2

      we would cover our notebooks too, and my Dad worked in a 'hot stamp' plant where he would bring home rolls of shiny foil like paper I would use for my books. Not available in stores at the time. His company created hot stamping templates for things like the car dash and electronic labelling for the plastic covers.

  • @mendyviola
    @mendyviola Рік тому +82

    I feel bad for kids these days with the reduced school libraries. So many classics are being banned these days that I grew up reading for odd reasons. “Those who not study history are doomed to repeat it”. 😊

    • @Cwgrlup
      @Cwgrlup Рік тому +5

      The smell of books in a library is something every kid should have the opportunity to experience. This is so sad. I absolutely loved the libraries growing up. They were a really great place to study!

    • @70s80s
      @70s80s Рік тому +2

      BINGO

    • @harrietbrown6415
      @harrietbrown6415 Рік тому

      My local library smells of hot carpets, not books.

    • @loganw1232
      @loganw1232 Рік тому +2

      A lot of kids don’t know the good of books because they think they can get everything on their school laptops.

    • @karenh2890
      @karenh2890 11 місяців тому +2

      My grandchildren's school has a library. They check books out of the school library regularly. My daughter also takes them to the public library, particularly in the summer.

  • @MHK1961
    @MHK1961 8 місяців тому +5

    I went to school from 1966 to 1979. Another thing I remember was learning and practicing cursive writing which I enjoy knowing how to do, and which I heard recently was being phased out as part of the modern school curriculum.

    • @virginiaoflaherty2983
      @virginiaoflaherty2983 6 місяців тому +2

      I wrote a office referral for a 7th grader, he wanted to know what it said. PATHETIC! It was in cursive. I read it to him so he would have confidence that I did not lie about his behavior. After that I asked what they would do when they needed to read cursive documents when they grew up. I told them to have their parents teach them. Many did. Nobody wants to look ignorant. Schools are graduating very unprepared people. I can;t imagine what they are thinking. I just say, thank you Bill Gates. He is responsible for the downfall of public education.

  • @woofer13
    @woofer13 Рік тому +8

    In elementary school, when it rained we always played jacks aka jax during recess, and we often played hopscotch when it was nice outside.

  • @frankcovert6196
    @frankcovert6196 Рік тому +24

    Early 60's school days included monthly preparedness drills, alarm sounded and sometimes you lined up and went to the school basement and other times you got under your desk and curled up on your knees covering your head with your arms. The red scare was taken very seriously back then, I guess it's a good thing that those old desks were bomb proof.

    • @dalemihocik4732
      @dalemihocik4732 Рік тому +2

      My elementary school was a designated bomb shelter complete with stored food and other essentials. They were kept in the boiler room right under the pipes that were wrapped in asbestos.

    • @frankcovert6196
      @frankcovert6196 Рік тому +3

      @@dalemihocik4732 sounds about right, you survive the blast then croak sometime later from mesothelioma LOL.And here we are witnessing the lunacy of today, things really have changed since we were kids.

    • @dalemihocik4732
      @dalemihocik4732 Рік тому +3

      @@frankcovert6196 Just recently all the schools in that district were torn down. I showed up to watch the demolition and had of the men rescue than yellow and black shelter sign for me. I have it in my garage, it always brings a smile to my face to see it.

    • @voiceofreason7856
      @voiceofreason7856 Рік тому +3

      Yeah, 'duck and cover' like that will save you from a nuclear blast.
      Talk about faint hope of even surviving ! Just you and you sturdy desk left, right ? LOL...

    • @richardg1426
      @richardg1426 9 місяців тому +1

      And in my school we had to pray before eating our milk and cookies in kindergarten in 1959.

  • @RiverDanube
    @RiverDanube 6 місяців тому +3

    So many things are gone. The wooden desks of days gone by with the hole at the top for ink wells, they lasted for decades only to be made way for tables that needed constant replacing.

  • @rburrows7786
    @rburrows7786 8 місяців тому +10

    So many things. One is respect for teachers. I went to school in the 50-60s. You did what the teachers said, no back talk. We had marksmanship class. Boys and girls. We shot .22 rifles. Also, we used to bring our rifles to shop class before hunting season to work on them. You had to have them in a case while you walked through school to the shop class. During hunting season, we’d bring our guns to school so we could meet our friends after school to go hunting. There was never a problem. Ever. And there was never a nefarious thought in our heads, ever. This was a town with 40,000 people it wasn’t a small hick town. We had respect for each other. Society has changed for the worse. We didn’t grow up watching violent videos or playing violent video games. It was a simpler time, and imho a much better time

    • @jhonsiders6077
      @jhonsiders6077 6 місяців тому +2

      We had a small bore shooting team with a range in the basement. We brought or rifles to school ( cased of course ) on the bus handed them to our principal he locked them up till end of day he even shot with us was one of our chaperones when we shot competition with other schools taking a bus ! We also had a trap and skeet team and practice was out at trail glades range after school some took the bus others their cars we had several adult chaperones for that too . We interacted with our principal and teachers and other guys parents too outside the class room I think that made every one better and more respectful too .

    • @lotsoffun4716
      @lotsoffun4716 6 місяців тому +1

      Wow! I'm old and NEVER saw a gun at school. Where did you grow up?

    • @rburrows7786
      @rburrows7786 6 місяців тому +1

      @@lotsoffun4716 Worcester Mass. believe it or not Mass used to be free. Hunting was great. I left there at 18 to go to Vietnam, got home and moved south. Now it’s a socialists paradise. Thank god I moved south when I did.

    • @lotsoffun4716
      @lotsoffun4716 6 місяців тому

      @@rburrows7786Yeah, I don't care for socialism. I live in the South as well. But didn't grow up with guns at school. That's funny.

  • @karengunia5451
    @karengunia5451 Рік тому +134

    This video makes me sad to think these children today will never experience the wonderful memories of these school days

    • @frankrizzo4460
      @frankrizzo4460 Рік тому +15

      Yes I totally agree with you, I really believe that we were blessed to have experienced those days.

    • @kathymcel
      @kathymcel Рік тому +8

      I don't know where this guy lives but our schools still have most of the things he mentions including changing for gym and doing actual sports and exercise!

    • @frankrizzo4460
      @frankrizzo4460 Рік тому +7

      @@inkey2 Yeah my Mom went to Catholic school back in the 40s and they would use rulers to discipline kids.

    • @laureencriss8220
      @laureencriss8220 Рік тому +5

      ​@inkey2 My older sisters went to Catholic school and told me about the rulers on the knuckles. The last half of 8 kids went to public schools. My brothers described the paddle with the holes in it. But there was an extra plank of wood attached so that the first would catch your rear in the holes, and the other would slam fast after, making it much more painful. I was SO scared of being punished that I actually wet my pants because my distracted teacher didn't see my raised hand to dismiss me for the rest room. 1971

    • @laureencriss8220
      @laureencriss8220 Рік тому +6

      ​@@inkey2OMG. I just noticed your name! My nieces and nephews called me Inky because one of the couldn't say my name and it stuck. Some of them (40+ y.o.) still call me that today. 😁

  • @Ames2pleaze1
    @Ames2pleaze1 Рік тому +9

    How about when the class had a film to watch?
    A screen would be pulled down from the front wall or a portable screen would be set up while a movie projector was being loaded with the film.
    The lights were turned off & the projector was turned on making that familiar sound that those projectors made.
    If the film happened to break or the projector had a malfunction, it always provided reason for the class to urupt in laughter, clapping, & whistles until the lights were turned back on to address the situation.
    Oh, the good old days!
    I miss them.

  • @Tiffany-th1fn
    @Tiffany-th1fn Рік тому +4

    I remember having to look up the definitions of words in an dictionary or when doing reports or essays for certain classes, using the encyclopedia for information. Tiffany Deaton

  • @arniegarcia2400
    @arniegarcia2400 Рік тому +6

    Loved this video. Captures everything well. Growing up, many of my classrooms had an actual closet with a hook for my jacket as well as a cubby for books/items Many teaches also played a musical instrument (ukelele, guitar, harmonica, piano, etc.) and we'd actually sing along with the teacher. My 1st grade teacher, Mrs. Anderson, would play the zither and we'd sing along--great memories! They were VERY talented educators!

  • @paul16451
    @paul16451 Рік тому +160

    One other thing I remember was there was always an American flag in the classroom, usually hanging high up in a holder on the wall. In grade school we had the flag salute every morning, and although that practice stopped in high school, the flag still remained in most classrooms. You don't really see flags in the classroom any more.

    • @jenniferhansen3622
      @jenniferhansen3622 Рік тому +18

      There are flags in the schools here where I live. And they do the flag salute every morning.

    • @shootshellz
      @shootshellz Рік тому +26

      Chinese flag in blue states.

    • @antoinecarter5812
      @antoinecarter5812 Рік тому +11

      @@shootshellz Pretty Much

    • @lovly2cu725
      @lovly2cu725 Рік тому +9

      we still had them in high school & the pledge was part of the morning announcements

    • @TRIPSTTR
      @TRIPSTTR Рік тому

      ​@@shootshellzyou gotta think before you say dumb shit like this

  • @rhonettem.1974
    @rhonettem.1974 Рік тому +35

    Excellent video! I graduated high school in 1992 and everything just used to be so much better back then! I enjoy your channel very much.

    • @manfredmann2766
      @manfredmann2766 Рік тому +1

      Even way back in 1992, I used to think that 1983 to 1985 was a good time to be in hs.
      In 2002, 1992 looked much better, and now in 2023 it seemed awesome.
      1992 had no social media other than maybe an occasional email or two and there was actually some OK music back then, but not as good as 1983, and MTV was still playing music videos, but Reality shows started emerging.
      From what I remember, 1992 was the beginning of the downward spiral of pop culture and then it got slightly better in the mid to late 90s, but by 2000 it got progressively worse thereafter, whether one was in a school or out in society.

    • @ThePumpin1
      @ThePumpin1 Рік тому +1

      I graduated in 1991.

  • @MarinCipollina
    @MarinCipollina 6 місяців тому +2

    Mimeograph and Ditto machines were common when I was in elementary school in the 1960s.. Our school had the manual ones that had to be hand cranked to spit out copies of daily work assignments Various students would be assigned this task. I always enjoyed the unique scent of the aromatic wash used during the print process.

  • @billtisch3698
    @billtisch3698 9 місяців тому +17

    Can you imagine trying to use plastic grocery bags to cover text books today, instead of the brown paper grocery bags then? Every household had a stack of those saved paper grocery bags. I think ours was between the refrigerator and the cabinet next to it. Endless utility.

  • @marcmckenzie5110
    @marcmckenzie5110 Рік тому +44

    One of my favorite memories was from first grade in 1968, when as a reward for good behavior and getting our lessons done, we were sent to the janitor’s room to clean erasers. He supervise the process, which was to hold each eraser on a machine that vibrated dramatically, then plumes of chalk dust billowed into the air. Then we would sweep it up, gather the erasers, and head back to class. I remember that often when we got to the classroom, our nice teacher would brush off the residual chalk from our clothes. As a grandfather now, I can see you this ritual could have exposed some kids to a lot of risks - but I loved it.

    • @cindywatman1725
      @cindywatman1725 Рік тому +9

      I loved cleaning the erasers as well. Our teachers were thee ones who selected the students who got the honor and since I was so well behaved and studious I was the the honor more times than I can count….a very special memory😊

    • @keithbrown7685
      @keithbrown7685 Рік тому +6

      This was a reward??? It seems more like a punishment.

    • @marcmckenzie5110
      @marcmckenzie5110 Рік тому +3

      @@keithbrown7685 Yeah, it is funny looking back. Maybe it was getting out of the classroom. Or the trust from my teacher. My dad wasn’t around much then, so I also enjoyed the gruff coaching of our old janitor. Whatever, for me it was.

    • @thetaekwondoe3887
      @thetaekwondoe3887 Рік тому +2

      @@keithbrown7685 It was a reward for us in 4th grade, as well. We all hoped to be picked to do it.

    • @signs9587
      @signs9587 Рік тому +2

      @@keithbrown7685 Yes I remember it was a reward t get out of class but as an older person today it sounds dirty and nothing that I would want to do now!

  • @vulpo
    @vulpo Рік тому +10

    You left out all of the projectors:
    - overhead projectors used in algebra, geometry, and trigonometry classes
    - film strip projectors
    - opaque projectors
    - 16mm film projectors
    Maybe some of these are still used, but they are 20th century technologies that have increasingly been replaced by computer displays and streaming video.

    • @betsyj59
      @betsyj59 Рік тому +1

      The good old (film) movie projectors!

    • @barbarak2836
      @barbarak2836 Рік тому +1

      Not a projector, but this reminded me of the wonderful smell of mimeograph machines.

  • @momsnoteatingbugs1919
    @momsnoteatingbugs1919 Рік тому +2

    My daughters, in their 20’s, work with kids who can’t tell time. Just blows me away all the things they are unable to do and don’t even know about.

  • @Philobiblion
    @Philobiblion Рік тому +23

    As others have mentioned, the old 1892 school building we attended until 6th grade in 1960 had solid oak desks that were screwed to the floor. They had inkwells, and were heavily stained with not-so-long before spilled ink. My year, HS class of 1966, was the first to use ball point pens, in third or fourth grade, rather than an ink pen with a steel nib that you dipped in the ink. Another feature of my school was desk surfaces scarred by 60 years of boredom, reflected in the graffiti carved into the desks by generations of pocket knife-wielding grade schoolers. Initials, sometime complete names, sometimes crude appeals to the gods to be favored by some small gesture of affection from Linda, or Carol, or Nancy or Susan, or Grace, or some other common name that no child has anymore. One desk I was assigned (for the entire year) had several strategically carved pits that your pencil would fall into, putting a hole in your paper.
    That old school building had rooms with 12 foot (at least) ceilings and tall windows. On hot days, one of the bigger boys had the job of opening the upper half of the window with a long pole that had a brass hook on the end that fit into a piece of brass hardware screwed onto the window sash. In either third or forth grade the back windows in the classroom opened onto the tin roof of a first floor classroom. One of the coveted jobs assigned to boys who behaved was going out onto the roof at the end of the day to clap the erasers. Another coveted job was 'milkman'. If you could afford it, a quarter a week would buy you a half-pint carton of either white or chocolate milk you got about 10AM, every day. The milkman went down to the lunchroom to pick up the milk in a wooden box.Girls had the job of washing the blackboard with a pail of water and a sponge. For some reason, certain kids in my class were prone to throwing up, which would result in someone being assigned to escort the embarrassed victim to the nurse's office while a runner was sent out to find and summon the custodian, who arrived with a can of cedar sawdust that was spread on the vomit. There are certain odors that stick in the mind. One is the unique smell of cedar vomit. Another is the aroma of the coal-fired boiler in the basement that the custodian kept going all day.
    There are a lot of things to remember about that time almost 70 years ago.

    • @tophorn7348
      @tophorn7348 Рік тому +4

      Yes! We had those transom windows above the doors that could be opened and closed using a long wooden rod with a hook on the narrow end. The hook would go through a brass ring of the spring-loaded latch on the top of the transom window's frame. Since there was no a/c back then, we opened all the windows, and the transom above the door. And coal furnaces that made it 🥵 hot in winter. The steam radiators would hiss and spit steam, plus the excessive heat 🫠put out burning coal in winter, sure made me woozy in boring classes. Hard to focus when you're ready to fall asleep😴 just after lunch! Then, if I could be excused to go to the 🧻restroom, we had a long row of sinks across from the toilet🚽 stalls. The soap was powder from a teardrop shaped glass globe with a metal spring loaded rod that you pushed up into the stem of the soap dispenser & powdered soap would come out in your palm. The towel dispenser had one white woven towel with a blue stripe on the edge. The towel was attached to a wooden rod at each end, where one rod was mounted at the top, the other mounted below it inside the dispenser, and a loop of the towel was hanging down out of the dispenser; when you pulled the towel to dry, it would roll around to one rod, and hopefully you'd get a dry part of the towel. When a lot of kids used the towel, it sometimes didn't have time to dry.

    • @dgwaters
      @dgwaters Рік тому +1

      One time in the first grade I saw one of the girls throw up on her desk. If remember correctly, the school custodian used kitty litter to clean it up.

    • @burleybater
      @burleybater 10 місяців тому +4

      @@tophorn7348 I recall the heavy second layer of outer wool socks drying on those steam heat radiators. As well as the wool gloves, mitts and scarves we could fit on, all jammed together beneath the windows.
      The other thing I remember about older school buildings, were the cloak rooms, where all the winter coats and boots were hung up. Loved those cloak rooms. Not a few times, especially in winter, if I stayed at school for lunch (12pm-1:30pm) I'd sneak into the cloak room after wolfing a sandwich down, and grab a quick 15-minute cat nap. Just lolling on the floor, back against the wall. It was heaven.

    • @starmnsixty1209
      @starmnsixty1209 9 місяців тому +1

      Ah yes. The coal-fired furnace. A thing of the past it seems.

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina 6 місяців тому +1

      @@tophorn7348 Oh.. you had the recycler.. I remember seeing those at some gasoline station washrooms, but my school restroom used those brown folded paper towels. My elementary school was a two story brick building built in 1907 with a coal fired boiler and steam radiators. No AC. Interesting times ! The cafeteria was in the basement, and there was a room full of fallout shelter supplies in case of atomic attack by the Soviet Union. We didn't have the 'duck & cover' drill, but we did have fire drills.

  • @SpotTheBorgCat
    @SpotTheBorgCat Рік тому +8

    Being reminded every Friday to take our gym clothes home to be WASHED (!) . You really regretted not doing so by Monday P.E. class!

  • @IMBrute-ir7gz
    @IMBrute-ir7gz Рік тому +94

    Oh yeah! As a Boomer student in the 1950s and 60's, I remember all that stuff, and more! Florida public school dress codes were really strict in those days. Sneakers were for P.E. class. Leather shoes were required for the rest of the day. No T-shirts either! Skirts and dresses for girls, and no blue jeans for boys! Boy's shirts had to be tucked in. And it went on and on...

    • @betsyj59
      @betsyj59 Рік тому +3

      I remember bring a note home from school (3rd grade in 1968) that informed my mother that girls could now wear culottes - shorts that look like skirts!

    • @pegs1659
      @pegs1659 Рік тому

      I was in jr. high when we could start wearing them. By that time we could also wear jeans.

    • @SarahRenz59
      @SarahRenz59 Рік тому +3

      My older sister and cousin were both in HS in the late 1960s (class of '69). My cousin in particular liked the latest fashion and she was constantly reprimanded because her skirts were too short. They'd make girls kneel on the floor then measure from the floor to the bottom hem of the skirt. Anything greater than 3 inches and you were sent home! By the time I entered HS in 1974 the dress code had been abolished, but I do remember a couple of girls being scolded for wearing tube tops and halter tops.

    • @pianomaly9
      @pianomaly9 Рік тому +8

      Boys' hair had to be off the collar in Jr. High and High School.

    • @incog99skd11
      @incog99skd11 Рік тому +5

      @@pianomaly9 Boy's hair had to be no longer than mid ear in our school in the 1960's. The PE teacher measured our hair each week to make sure we were in compliance.

  • @SarahMichelle777
    @SarahMichelle777 Рік тому +3

    I teach kindergarten in a public school. I have analog clocks in my room and teach my class how to use analog to tell time. I have a physical glibe and use it quite often. I have tons of books. I rarely let me class use technology. There are two programs on the ipad we have to use every week for a certain amount of time, but other than that we do not use tech. Thankfully every year i am able to teach my class to love the classic stuff instead of all the stuff we have now. We also dance to classics. They love songs like rock around the clock and we will rock you :)

  • @AllenCNW441
    @AllenCNW441 6 місяців тому +4

    Eighth grade math class in 1963: the teacher had a sign under the clock on the wall: “Time will pass, will you?”

  • @Felidae-ts9wp
    @Felidae-ts9wp Рік тому +40

    As always your videos bring back so many great memories..I miss those days so much.

  • @jfchonors8873
    @jfchonors8873 Рік тому +27

    In eighth grade a bunch of us got detention for throwing Boston cream pie around the cafeteria. For a week we had to sit in a classroom eating our lunch and not allowed to talk to anyone while one of the teachers sat in the front menacing us. That was 55 years ago and I still remember it
    Also those analog clocks in our school were manufactured by a company called Simplex. Once an hour the master clock in the office sent out a radio signal which synchronized the time on all the clocks in the school

    • @kendallevans4079
      @kendallevans4079 Рік тому +1

      You may have been the inspiration for the "Breakfast Club" movie?

    • @nancymcmonarch
      @nancymcmonarch Рік тому

      They should have made you clean it up.

  • @Texbec
    @Texbec 9 місяців тому +2

    Kids today are missing not only basic life skills but also consequences, responsibility, respect, and so much more. I graduated i '86. I remember all these. Wow memories.

  • @gary-qn7wu
    @gary-qn7wu Рік тому +2

    I remember the fall of 64 regular milk was a penny,chocolate was 2 cents, also going to the cafeteria to watch movies on a projector, I especially liked it when most of the movies were large reels, I knew the afternoon would be watching movies,not regular school work!

  • @barbaraanderson8391
    @barbaraanderson8391 Рік тому +52

    I enjoyed reading everyone’s comments so much! I also am thankful for these many memories, now seeing how much value there was to them! Nostalgia, yes, but woven together with gratitude and smiles ! 🙏🏻🥰🤭

  • @aaronpincus6095
    @aaronpincus6095 Рік тому +61

    I was on the rifle team in my High School. Rifles were kept in cases in the Coach's closet. He kept the ammo in his desk. On Thursday's we had competitions against other schools. We would check out our rifle, buy a 100 rounds for a couple of bucks and head off to the range. This was in the L.A. unified school district. Not some rural town in the middle of Texas.

    • @tylerjames6842
      @tylerjames6842 Рік тому +6

      i too was on the rifle team in the sixties. we used to shoot in the school's basement.

    • @-Subtle-
      @-Subtle- Рік тому +2

      Those still exist.

    • @brandonletzko2472
      @brandonletzko2472 Рік тому +3

      Wow, all those guns and ammo must have led to lots of school shootings.

    • @jamesgriffin8354
      @jamesgriffin8354 Рік тому +3

      I happen to live in that rural town in the middle of Texas - Brady, Texas!

    • @user-vr6xm8lm1o
      @user-vr6xm8lm1o Рік тому +1

      ​@@brandonletzko2472 In the 1960s, I never saw any guns
      or ammo; but, by 1970, in the tenth grade - the girls P.E.
      did have an archery class.

  • @terereynolds698
    @terereynolds698 Рік тому +3

    When I was growing up in the 60’s and 70’s the paddle was called the board of education. We had lockers we kept our books in, when the bell rang, you went to your locker, put your book in it and got your book for the next class, pe was my favorite class, especially tennis. At my high school there was a place right next to the school gate where students could smoke there were even a few teachers that would go smoke with the students

  • @RABSTRAINS
    @RABSTRAINS Рік тому +3

    We have taken so many steps back! No more dodgeball??? WOW, we have become so soft as a nation! Thank You for the awesome memories👍

  • @Nunofurdambiznez
    @Nunofurdambiznez Рік тому +27

    LOL wow. forgot ALL about smacking erasers together to clear them of chalk dust! We used to BEG our 2nd grade teacher each day to let us do that chore.. nope.. she had her favorites, and thankfully, I was one of them! Thanks Mrs, Elliott - even though you were as mean as a junkyard dog, you always let me pound the erasers! LOL!

    • @hungryjerk7872
      @hungryjerk7872 Рік тому +5

      We felt honored to be asked by our teacher to clean the erasers in 4th grade.

    • @francoisross2480
      @francoisross2480 Рік тому +6

      It was never punishment to clean the erasers it was a privilege.

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 Рік тому +1

      Junkyard dog 😂

    • @MaryHughes-ko4fj
      @MaryHughes-ko4fj Рік тому +2

      Clapping erasers is one of the plot points in the Beverly Cleary book, "Ellen Tebbits" (1951). Ellen is bothered when her teacher NEVER picks her to clap erasers but later finds out the teacher doesn't pick her because she (the teacher) thinks Ellen's clothes are too nice to get dirty clapping erasers. She eventually gets picked and it's a happy day for her.

    • @nancymcmonarch
      @nancymcmonarch Рік тому

      Wow. No, nobody begged to do that when I was in school.

  • @woofer13
    @woofer13 Рік тому +30

    I'm 74 and in my elementary school (1st-6th grade), we didn't crave pizza, we craved Mrs. Walters spaghetti every Wednesday. My mouth waters thinking about it. And we had Dixie cups for dessert, ice cream in a paper bowl-like thingy.

    • @betsyj59
      @betsyj59 Рік тому +1

      I'm 63 and we didn't have pizza either... what we looked forward to was the one day a week we got big, warm biscuits that had flecks of cheese in them. Delicious!

    • @andreeelliott2943
      @andreeelliott2943 Рік тому +5

      With a flat wooden “spoon” to eat the cup of ice cream

    • @jfranklins
      @jfranklins Рік тому +1

      I'm going on 61 and I fell in love with sloppy joes in my school cafeteria in elementary school lol.

    • @woofer13
      @woofer13 Рік тому

      @@jfranklins Yes! I'd forgotten about sloppy joes, and that was a favorite as well....just not quite as good as the spaghetti.

    • @woofer13
      @woofer13 Рік тому

      @@andreeelliott2943 I'd forgotten the spoon...and there was a picture of a rock star or sports figure at the bottom of the cup.....or lid....I forget which now.

  • @pongop
    @pongop Рік тому +3

    I love that the photo of the book from the school library is HG Wells' The Time Machine, and this channel is like a time capsule or time machine. That's so meta.

  • @ScottRandolph-dd7dr
    @ScottRandolph-dd7dr 9 місяців тому +1

    🎉 greetings from coastal Mississippi. So glad I went to school in the 70's ...thanks for the memories 😊

  • @christopherkraft1327
    @christopherkraft1327 Рік тому +38

    Thanks for once again bringing back cherished memories of my school days of the late sixties & early seventies!!! Wow, how the world has changed!!! 👍👍🙂

  • @besttimes3248
    @besttimes3248 Рік тому +33

    My junior high 69' 72' had great lunches .40 cents, and saved .25 cents if you bought a lunch card for the week, .03 cents if you wanted an extra milk and .05 cents for chocolate. Now you get fish crackers and a cream cheese bagel for something like $20 a week. In high school we had a hot lunch line and a cold lunch line which had sandwichs and chips and snacky type foods.

    • @birdsfan57
      @birdsfan57 Рік тому +1

      Yes! Same age, same memories...35 cents for a full meal with juice...Fridays were the best, because it was Pizza or Giant Tuna Hoagie with side of chips...

    • @pegs1659
      @pegs1659 Рік тому

      I never thought milk went with pizza though. Gross!

    • @darcihoudeshell2588
      @darcihoudeshell2588 Рік тому +2

      Even though I never attended a Catholic school, I vividly remember having fish for lunch on Fridays. Anyone else?

    • @besttimes3248
      @besttimes3248 Рік тому +1

      @@darcihoudeshell2588 I don't remember having fish anytime, we had Spaghetti, pizza, meatloaf or Salisbury steak
      sliced turkey all with beans or carrots, corn maybe and some sort of dessert, of course we had other things but this is what I remember, the Spaghetti being the best, they would scoop it up in an ice cream scoop. Late in Jr. High and all through High
      School we had vending machines (soda, candy, chips).

    • @deborahphillips500
      @deborahphillips500 Рік тому

      You can blame the commie liberals for that cheap food. Those libtards would use taxpayers’ money to buy food crops and dairy products straight from the farmers, then turn around and sell them cheap to schools and the like. Hell - they even gave a lot of it away. School kids kids getting free individual milk cartons (or paying a nickel for a chocolate one). The poor getting allotments of butter and cheese. Praise Jesus, those socialist days are gone!

  • @gigilamoore2656
    @gigilamoore2656 6 місяців тому +3

    I miss being told to be quiet in the library. Good times.

  • @mik7564
    @mik7564 6 місяців тому +1

    I loved going to the library, thumbing through the dewy decimal system, and having my library card stamped back in the day. The libraries back in the day had an archaic scent. I loved it! Ohhh and book fair day! I loved book fair day. Good times.

  • @bladerunner752
    @bladerunner752 Рік тому +13

    I never thought I would get misty eyed over School memories. Your too good at this, thank you so much for these amazing memories.

    • @slim-oneslim8014
      @slim-oneslim8014 Рік тому +1

      Love the job Recollection does with these videos!

    • @josorr
      @josorr 8 місяців тому

      My too good?

  • @betsyj59
    @betsyj59 Рік тому +133

    Oh, one more thing: If you were in elementary school during the 60s, do you remember how chickenpox, mumps, and rubella were all considered normal childhood illnesses? Today it's difficult to find any article discussing this in a Google search.

    • @pegs1659
      @pegs1659 Рік тому +13

      Chicken pox was definitely in that category. I think mumps may have been too. I remember getting measles. Wasn't there two types with f measles with one called the German Measles?

    • @dragondancer1814
      @dragondancer1814 Рік тому +15

      As someone who had a severe case of chicken pox, to the point where I was basically this four-foot-tall ZIT and my parents had me so whacked out on Benadryl (to keep me from scratching) that I couldn’t go from here to the wall without tripping over my own feet, I cannot say enough good things about vaccinations and the hell my kids are able to avoid now!

    • @kimbrey65
      @kimbrey65 Рік тому

      I had a second bout of chicken pox that was only on my face, a few weeks after the first round. They called it Ana__ something.

    • @joywebster2678
      @joywebster2678 Рік тому +1

      Had them all early.

    • @TheMysticRealms
      @TheMysticRealms Рік тому +7

      ​ I'm right there with you! I had such a horrible time with chicken pox! For starters, I had it more than once (I wanna say 3 times), with one of those being such a bad outbreak that I actually had them INSIDE my girly bits! I couldn't do anything but sit in oatmeal baths and drown myself in Calamine lotion! It was something so freaking miserable that I'd NEVER want my children to go through.

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 Рік тому +4

    A school I went to in the '60's used a buzzer to indicate the change of class, beginning/end of the school day. If you heard a bell, it was the fire alarm.

  • @truekaliban4674
    @truekaliban4674 Рік тому +4

    When I was about 10 or 11, I got into some dustup at school and ended up in the principals' office. I guess I didn't act sufficiently cowed, because the guy ended up calling my folks. My dad came down to the school to discuss the matter. The principal stupidly "cautioned" Dad that, if I "got out of line again," he "wouldn't hesitate to use the paddle" on me, pointing to the thing, where it hung on the wall. Dad simply said, "if you ever touch my kid with that thing, I'll come down here and show you just exactly how goddamned much damage it can do." I was never again called into that office.

  • @tal8762
    @tal8762 Рік тому +11

    My elementary school cafeteria had excellent lunches. My favorites were tacos, chili, bbq beef on bun (their version of sloppy joes), and pizza.

    • @oreally8605
      @oreally8605 Рік тому +2

      Yep. I always got heartburn from those sloppy Joe's!

    • @julenepegher6999
      @julenepegher6999 Рік тому +1

      Yes, we had really good lunches too, and the candy counter afterwards, a nickel could buy you a bag full of penny candy.

    • @incog99skd11
      @incog99skd11 Рік тому +1

      Some of those lunches gave everyone gas. By 5th period, it was a pretty noisy affair in the classrooms.

  • @MatthewSmith-cv7op
    @MatthewSmith-cv7op Рік тому +7

    1.) Recess was longer. Now it’s barely 20 minutes. Maybe less.
    2.) The metal playgrounds have now been replaced by plastic structures.
    3.) Projectors and overhead slides have been replaced by PowerPoint.

    • @betsyj59
      @betsyj59 Рік тому

      Giving kids only 20 minutes in a school day to blow off steam is about as dumb as it gets! And, gee, wonder how we all survived those metal jungle gyms, and those metal bars we used hook one leg over and then somersault in place around? (Not to mention riding our bikes for hours all over the neighborhood without a helmet in sight!). Glad I was a kid before all the "protections" became the norm.

  • @ethniciteesllc7511
    @ethniciteesllc7511 5 місяців тому +1

    The Abacus, the wall mounted pencil sharpener, the smells from the mimeograph machine producing "dittos", and the hand cranked "finger chopper"....i mean the paper cutter!😂

  • @lathamarea1437
    @lathamarea1437 Рік тому +1

    As a senior in 1973, there were designated bathrooms and outside areas to smoke..Senior skip day was thirty days before graduation..The last day of actual school before finals was seniors day, a day of fun, games, food and music..I never realized It would be the last day i'd see a lot of school friends i had since kindergarten..Graduation was bittersweet..

  • @markw208
    @markw208 Рік тому +7

    Good video. In elementary school the kitchen ladies took pride in their food and frowned if we didn’t like it. They cared and so did we. Real food. Same for Jr high, but not quite as personal. The library was an experience. You had to be quiet and that was challenge for many kids. Reading books could be a contest as well as educational. Who read the most books? I’m absolutely certain P.E. in elementary, Jr High & High School whipped us into shape, taught us sportsmanship and team effort. I’ve lived in Texas for decades and I’m sure our kids would struggle playing many sports

    • @betsyj59
      @betsyj59 Рік тому +2

      I remember having the most wonderful teacher in 3rd grade (1968) who had cats that she showed. Her cats won lots of ribbons and trophies. One day she told us that we could win those trophies and ribbons based on how many pages of books we'd read that year. She had the whole class reading like maniacs. Have loved reading my whole life.

  • @mewregaurdhissyfit7733
    @mewregaurdhissyfit7733 Рік тому +7

    Some of my teachers used Flash Cards in class. And I remember the nuclear bomb practices, where we had to go out into the hallway, hunch down, put our heads between our knees and cover our heads with our hands..............like that was going to save us from a nuclear explosion! LOL

  • @jc19766
    @jc19766 Рік тому +3

    I remember those paper report cards the teachers filled out by hand. It was during the 1989 school year when my school transitioned to the computer printed report cards. I thought the paper report cards added a personal touch, but I am sure the teachers liked the computer printed report cards better.

  • @janetbaker8312
    @janetbaker8312 Рік тому +4

    I miss these days. They were so much better.

  • @lesleeherschfus707
    @lesleeherschfus707 Рік тому +5

    The mimeograph machine. I was my Spanish teacher’s student assistant. I typed her test on the mimeograph template for her. I also corrected all tests for her except my own. When you got the handouts that had that smell of mimeograph ink you gagged but oh do I miss it

  • @martiniangoldberg
    @martiniangoldberg Рік тому +35

    An excellent walk down Memory Lane, as usual for Recollection Road...

  • @glam2gobeauty811
    @glam2gobeauty811 10 місяців тому +1

    I miss having full schools. Meaning a gym , a auditorium, a pool , etc. Now when they tear an old school down its replaced with a condensed version with a bunch of multi purpose rooms. And i went to school in the 90s i can only imagine schools before my time

  • @patriciaoconnor402
    @patriciaoconnor402 Рік тому +18

    I think one of the biggest mistakes in school was to stop teaching longhand or cursive, depending what it was called when you went to school. When us oldsters die out, and documents are unearthed, how will future generations read the documents? Also, I don't want to live in a world that doesn't have physical books and libraries. Thank goodness my personal book collection has 35,000 books.

    • @johntracy72
      @johntracy72 6 місяців тому +1

      With that many books, you'd make a lot of libraries jealous. That's an incredible collection.

    • @bradleyhamman9426
      @bradleyhamman9426 5 місяців тому +1

      I don’t write my signature “printing” my name I write it in cursive as adults do Duh!

  • @TeddyStrongBear
    @TeddyStrongBear Рік тому +12

    So many things are missing from schools today….and, most schools don’t have music or art classes any longer.

    • @betsyj59
      @betsyj59 Рік тому +1

      Yes, I remember being in orchestra in both elementary school and junior high.

  • @pcojedi
    @pcojedi Рік тому +18

    I spent most of my school years, 2nd grade to 12th, at Killeen TX next to Fort Hood. When it came to book covers the military always gave all the schools Army covers and sometimes Air Force. We rarely had to make our own until 11th or 12th grade when for some reason they printed Army ones were phased out. This was a great video

    • @neilm.greenberg4173
      @neilm.greenberg4173 Рік тому +3

      At 56, I miss making homemade book covers...but apparently the youth of today doesn't have textbooks, or brown paper bags to make covers out of...😥

    • @Petemonster62
      @Petemonster62 Рік тому +1

      The Navy would also give out book covers.

    • @kendallevans4079
      @kendallevans4079 Рік тому

      Military propaganda was everywhere in the cold war era. I remember some little hand out for young boys telling us how we should "prepare to serve" and that included weight training so we would be strong when we had to "engage the enemy"

  • @benitodominguez7034
    @benitodominguez7034 Рік тому +4

    The Pledge of Alegance was something I was proud to take part in. The raiding, lowering and finally learning the proper way to fold the american flag was an experiance I took pride in. Lsst of all being a crossing gaurd. Holding that tall pole with a red stop sign and sometimes having to wear that big yellow rain coat and boots.

  • @thecrew777
    @thecrew777 Рік тому +2

    The analog clock gave you a sense of how much time there was between "now" and lunch, or "now" and when school let out. I have a digital app I use on my desktop computer (I know those are even dinosaurs now) that gives me that analog clock. Somehow it said so much more than just the "exact time". That was something, as your video explained, was something you learned: "how to tell time".
    I'd like to say that of course things we remember fondly are no longer around. Every generation has that, and the nostalgia that comes with it. It's just part of life.
    I'd only add "remember when you respected teachers, even if you didn't like them?" But that goes back to the 1960's elementary schools and is perhaps too early for this channel.

    • @kendallevans4079
      @kendallevans4079 Рік тому

      I agree with your wrap up. We are all nostalgic to a degree. We're all a little home sick for a place that doesn't exist anymore.

  • @margaretkur8161
    @margaretkur8161 Рік тому +40

    I went to elementary school in the early 1960s. There was no foul language allowed (most of us knew perhaps what a couple of them meant) and we wouldn't dream of using any. One day when I was in 2nd or 3rd grade I remember arriving at school and a group of students were standing in a semicircle facing one outside wall. There were shocked faces, oohs and aahs, somebody's going to get in trouble, etc. What was the problem? Someone had used a white stone and written S**T on the brick wall!
    How different things are today.

    • @karenh2890
      @karenh2890 11 місяців тому +3

      My oldest grandchildren are in elementary school, and they would be in big trouble if they wrote "sh*t" on a wall. The school and their parents would not ignore it.

    • @KMFDM_Kid2000
      @KMFDM_Kid2000 6 місяців тому

      Imagine how far we would be as a society of we focused on things that actually mattered, like being a good person, standing up for those who need it the most, and not stupid fucking shit like what no-no words you can't use.

    • @pl5675
      @pl5675 6 місяців тому

      Would you be good with the N-word?

  • @MustangSally7259
    @MustangSally7259 Рік тому +17

    Crazy how things have changed!❤❤👍

  • @justbulma
    @justbulma Рік тому +1

    As a Gen Xer I remember a lot of theses things brings back a lot of memories I used to look forward to getting a new Trapper Keeper every school year

  • @jimboratelli742
    @jimboratelli742 Рік тому +14

    In other words, 'back in the day when children learned something in public school'

    • @jimalexander687
      @jimalexander687 7 місяців тому +1

      Indeed. Before our culture murdered objective truth and did its best to hide the body where no one will ever find it again.

  • @jasonrodgers9063
    @jasonrodgers9063 Рік тому +7

    When I was in high school (mid 1970's) our school had a designated "smoking patio" for STUDENTS outside next to the cafeteria! No way that would be done now!

    • @kyfho47
      @kyfho47 Рік тому +3

      Early 80's here. Student smoking on back steps behind gym. But they kept the soda machines turned off during the day because they were BAD for us.

    • @margaretsilva196
      @margaretsilva196 Рік тому +2

      Plus we smoked on the bus!

    • @incog99skd11
      @incog99skd11 Рік тому

      We smoked in the bathrooms. The hall monitors would check for smoking in there and if you were caught it was detention for a week. I swear the hall monitors were nazis.

  • @n.b.2164
    @n.b.2164 Рік тому +1

    I remember all of these. I carried so many books as kid on my long walks home. My kids don't carry books, they have lap tops and I have no idea what they are doing in school because everything is computerized. No homework. The library was my favorite place.

  • @nedludd7622
    @nedludd7622 5 місяців тому +2

    All through school in the 50's and 60's, from grade school to high school, we never wore matching uniforms in gym class. Apparently that photo must be from some exclusive private school.

  • @Soul-cry1
    @Soul-cry1 Рік тому +15

    Let's face it school for unpopular kids was just an anxiety fueled nightmare that still stings when you think back at it, especially dodgeball and getting picked last. 😢 Never want to relive those times.

    • @timhollis3390
      @timhollis3390 Рік тому +3

      I was always picked last or not at all.

    • @Soul-cry1
      @Soul-cry1 Рік тому +6

      @@timhollis3390 same,, gym for unpopular and unfit kids was just the worst time to be alive.

    • @betsyj59
      @betsyj59 Рік тому +3

      Dodge-a-ball was bad. Remember as a third-grader (1968) thinking what kind of backward "game" is this nightmare?

    • @keithbrown7685
      @keithbrown7685 Рік тому +3

      ​@@Soul-cry1 You're damn right. I hated it. Changing and having to shower with jerks who liked nothing better than to poke fun at whatever. School was a place to be humiliated at every turn, either by other kids, or by the teachers.
      My fondest wish, for most of my school years, was to go home. Just go home, where my mom would always be there to welcome us kids. That was my dream every day, to hear that last bell.

    • @margaretsilva196
      @margaretsilva196 Рік тому +3

      I was chubby and horrible at all sports. Hated gym!

  • @julenepegher6999
    @julenepegher6999 Рік тому +22

    I Loved my school years in the 60’s and 70’s! Elementary school with the nuns😃a little discipline never hurt anyone. High School was a blast! It’s what you made of it. Wouldn’t change a thing!!

    • @stevecrow3075
      @stevecrow3075 Рік тому +5

      Oh yes remember well good times. Graduated in 1975.😂🤣

    • @roiijamez33
      @roiijamez33 Рік тому +2

      Those Nuns didn'y play!!

    • @julenepegher6999
      @julenepegher6999 Рік тому +2

      @@roiijamez33 no they didn’t 😆

    • @Maggie22002
      @Maggie22002 Рік тому

      @@stevecrow3075oh, you’re a little older than I am. I graduated Catholic Grammar School in 1977, Chicago. Yep, old Polish nuns. Yikes!

    • @incog99skd11
      @incog99skd11 Рік тому +1

      The nuns had those huge pockets in their habits full of erasers. If you mis-behaved they'd bonk you on the head from across the room!!

  • @lilliedoubleyou3865
    @lilliedoubleyou3865 6 місяців тому

    I went to school from 1993 to 2005. Many of these things I remember, but just with a 90s update. Organizing our binders and picking out rad nylon book protectors takes me back.

  • @davidhall8874
    @davidhall8874 6 місяців тому +2

    Oh yes. I sure do miss the bullying I got in gym class, finding my towels in the toilet. I miss being humiliated as I couldn't climb that damn stupid rope. Oh and I just loved inhaling chalk dust as we had to go out back and clean them. That lovely cafeteria food we couldn't afford was replaced by a cold sandwich and an apple which someone would steal and throw across the room.

  • @CrimsonStainStudios
    @CrimsonStainStudios Рік тому +5

    When I was in school, we had a designated smoking area for students even. We had a smoking lounge for students where you could study, socialize, eat lunch and smoke a cig on breaks.

    • @RyanK-100
      @RyanK-100 Рік тому

      Same here. Seniors that were 18 could smoke in the senior lounge, an alcove IN THE HALLWAY every student had to pass through to get to the gym.

    • @margaretsilva196
      @margaretsilva196 Рік тому

      We smoked on the bus too!