The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsIf a child went back to a grade school when you attended, what would they find odd or not even know what it was? -------
Learning cursive.
cloudbase
(6,322 posts)Redleg
(7,036 posts)Brings back memories.
CrispyQ
(41,115 posts)Sometimes the paper was still wavy from the dampness of the ink. I can almost feel my stomach clench since it was mostly for tests.
Brother Buzz
(40,476 posts)However, the Ditto, or spirit duplicator had a seductively pleasant solvent smell
Niagara
(12,155 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)3catwoman3
(29,831 posts)AZJonnie
(4,050 posts)I don't know I've not been in a classroom in a long time, maybe they're still common?
debm55
(61,883 posts)for sharing with us.
ProfessorGAC
(77,324 posts)But, 80% of the time they are the electric type.
Kids use pencil for 95% of what they do in the schools I go to.
sakabatou
(46,391 posts)Bluestocking
(810 posts)I dont think they allow chalk anymore
debm55
(61,883 posts)Against each other to dust out?
Soul_of_Wit
(151 posts)This was the late '60s. The vacuum was the only thing in a small storage room.
debm55
(61,883 posts)Bluestocking
(810 posts)The teacher always had the students do it the fun way. Banging them together.
debm55
(61,883 posts)reACTIONary
(7,314 posts)... a special honor. Only the "good" kids, or one who had recently accomplished something significant, were given this chore.
hunter
(40,878 posts)The vacuum machine was in the same room where the playground equipment was kept.
I realize now it was a ploy to distract me when I started fidgeting more than usual and looked like I was about to do something that would disrupt the class.
And she didn't seem to care how long it took either.
Looking back, she had a whole lot of tricks like that.
I also spent a lot of time at an isolated desk in the back for "independent studies."
ProfessorGAC
(77,324 posts)But most of the time, they are just there, replaced with a white board mounted elsewhere of a smartscreen.
Maninacan
(348 posts)I know someone with a chalk allergy. Art teacher wanted to fail her for not doing pastel project. Was a real bitch about it.
debm55
(61,883 posts)used.
karynnj
(61,112 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)House of Roberts
(6,646 posts)Total lack of electronics, otherwise. No calculators, word processors or anything with a screen display.
debm55
(61,883 posts)StoolPigeon
(278 posts)For our video pleasure we had 16 mm projectors.
House of Roberts
(6,646 posts)Huntsville, after all, is known as Rocket City. A lot of the kids' dads worked for NASA here.
I do remember those 'educational' films, as well as the ubiquitous 'overhead projector' that allowed the teacher to project still images of just about anything onto a screen.
reACTIONary
(7,314 posts)... educational sort, of course.
Soul_of_Wit
(151 posts)wnylib
(26,495 posts)The screen was mounted just above the blackboard and could be pulled down for showing films. We pulled down the window blinds and turned off the overhead light.
debm55
(61,883 posts)I wore a white canvas Sam Brown belt with a badge and shepherded kids across the street. One day a bike ran me down. I got hot chocolate after a morning shift on nasty days.
debm55
(61,883 posts)Soul_of_Wit
(151 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)rsdsharp
(12,095 posts)EVERY FRICKIN DAY for a whole semester!
I even hated doing it for a week once every month or six weeks.
debm55
(61,883 posts)must have been good to be made the "Captain"
rsdsharp
(12,095 posts)WHOOPEE!
debm55
(61,883 posts)wnylib
(26,495 posts)sakabatou
(46,391 posts)nitpicked
(1,976 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)wanderer54
(110 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)some_of_us_are_sane
(3,645 posts)
debm55
(61,883 posts)jgo
(1,026 posts)Started when I was in elementary school.
debm55
(61,883 posts)crud
(1,282 posts)Learning that our country is founded on religious freedom. What the words of America The Beautiful and the pledge mean.
I'm just guessing that they don't teach that stuff any more.
debm55
(61,883 posts)still taught. Thank you , crud.
Wiz Imp
(10,484 posts)However, it is much less prioritized and detailed and than it used to be. So, most students today would be familiar with civics at a super basic level, but the vast majority would not have been taught a significant portion of the facts that were taught to everyone 50+ years ago.
https://www.nea.org/nea-today/all-news-articles/forgotten-purpose-civics-education-public-schools
Its Not an Exaggeration to Say that Civics Education is in Crisis.
Only 25 percent of U.S. students reach the proficient standard on the NAEP Civics Assessment. White, wealthy students are four to six times as likely as Black and Hispanic students from low-income households to exceed that level. Heres why: Students in wealthier public school districts are far more likely to receive high-quality civics education than students in low-income and majority-minority schools.
Contrary to Popular Belief, the Problem isnt that Students Receive No Civics Education.
All 50 states require some form of instruction in civics and/or government, and nearly 90 percent of students take at least one civics class. But too often, factual book learning is not reinforced with experience-based learning opportunities like community service, guided debates, critical discussion of current events, and simulations of democratic processes.
ProfessorGAC
(77,324 posts)It's state law. IL constitution test in 7th grade, US constitution in 8th grade. Can't graduate without passing the test.
I've subbed 8th grade social studies multiple times in the closer to home schools & have seen it being taken seriously at all.
Ocelot II
(131,296 posts)wooden desks with inkwells (we didn't even use the inkwells), 3-lined paper for learning cursive writing, books you covered with brown paper from shopping bags, pencil boxes, filmstrip projectors.
debm55
(61,883 posts)lastlib
(28,661 posts)...showing the Soviet Union......
debm55
(61,883 posts)Ocelot II
(131,296 posts)which is why Trump has probably wanted Greenland ever since he was in elementary school.
debm55
(61,883 posts)ProfessorGAC
(77,324 posts)Maybe in 4 of the 15 schools I go to.
The springs all still work, too!
sakabatou
(46,391 posts)LogDog75
(1,382 posts)Watching the jerky pictures on the screen and hearing the "clicking" of the film as it goes through the sprockets.
debm55
(61,883 posts)and the place in those metal canister to store. My teacher got some that were backward.
MiHale
(13,189 posts)Edit to add
the wire chalk holder with 5 slots for chalk sticks to be inserted
used for drawing music lines on the board
..🎼 ..like that emoji shows.
debm55
(61,883 posts)Last edited Mon May 4, 2026, 04:28 PM - Edit history (1)
Silver Gaia
(5,439 posts)I can still smell it when I think of my first classrooms.
debm55
(61,883 posts)enough. I heard some kids would eat it.
Silver Gaia
(5,439 posts)They had screw-on lids with a dauber attached. And yes, some kids did eat it! I tasted it and thought it was gross.
debm55
(61,883 posts)iwillalwayswonderwhy
(2,729 posts)It was a required course. Complete propaganda.
debm55
(61,883 posts)DBoon
(25,159 posts)My own kids (in their early 20s) said they never learned this, at least not in the way we did back in the early 70s.
debm55
(61,883 posts)Phonics is in the Spelling book and the Reader.Thank you very much. Redleg.
wnylib
(26,495 posts)I started kindergarten. I was was excused from reading instruction in the classroom and allowed to do puzzles during that time.
That reminds me of something else not in classrooms today -- Dick, Jane, Sally, and Spot.
debm55
(61,883 posts)wnylib
(26,495 posts)malthaussen
(18,632 posts)... for all I know, they still do, though.
-- Mal
debm55
(61,883 posts)Polly Hennessey
(8,980 posts)Blackboard with chalk and erasers; pencils; cursive writing ✍️; note passing in class; wooden desks with flip up lids.
Carrying school books in our arms (unless a boy carried them for you): 📚👩❤️💋👨
malthaussen
(18,632 posts)... since everybody has a backpack now.
-- Mal
Soul_of_Wit
(151 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)ProfessorGAC
(77,324 posts)And, the actual #2 wooden pencils. Mechanical pencils are more common in HS though.
As to cursive, it's actually taught in some art classes!
I see kids competing for who has the best cursive handwriting at the junior high level!
Soul_of_Wit
(151 posts)You stepped on a foot ring to make the water flow. There were at least 3 soap dispensers around the middle.
debm55
(61,883 posts)u4ic
(17,137 posts)Both boys and girls washrooms. Imagine the water wasted when only one child washed their hands!
CrispyQ
(41,115 posts)A kid could fly off the giant strides the way we did it.
We not only had gym class in the 1970s (which most people probably call PE) - but we also had 3 recess breaks a day: morning, after lunch, and afternoon. I was in the midwest & if it was really cold or raining they'd put us in the gym to play hockey or basketball. Kids need to run around a little.
CrispyQ
(41,115 posts)We had the same, morning, lunch, & afternoon. Until jr high, which was 7th grade.
TBF
(37,269 posts)and of course, PE class.
debm55
(61,883 posts)for sharing. CrispyQ. Looking back it was dangerous, but we were too young to realize that.
Tiny Tabby
(72 posts)Duck under your desk and put your hands over your eyes!
I'm sure that will suffice!
debm55
(61,883 posts)TBF
(37,269 posts)** I went to a K-8 elementary in a very small town in the midwest. Grades were combined because it was so small. 1-2 in one room, 3-4, 5th grade on their own, and then down the hall 6-8 had a few rooms and full sized lockers. In those grades we moved back and forth during the day to "practice changing classes".
Many things are different, but one thing I noticed in my kids' big suburban elementaries is that there are lunch monitors - teachers go off for break at that time.
We all ate in the gym (multi-purpose room). Long tables set up with teacher at the head. We all sang the same grace every day and then ate together. This was a public school in the 1970s. Times were very different then.
debm55
(61,883 posts)either. We were on our own getting the milk cartons open and the rest of it. We also started to change classes to get ready for Junior and Senior High.
TexLaProgressive
(12,786 posts)that were required for penmanship. Cursive writing, girls playing jacks, jumping rope, hop scotch- boys playing marbles and tops for keeps, yo-yo and all kind of unsupervised chasing games
debm55
(61,883 posts)TexLaProgressive
(12,786 posts)Like all the boys carried pocket knives at least in rural schools.No telling what the girls carried
debm55
(61,883 posts)The Madcap
(2,050 posts)I saw thick wooden ones and wide ones like a pickleball paddle. The worst I saw was made of fiberglass and had six holes drilled at the business end. I was luckily never struck by one, but I admit that I came close a few times.
It's good that they are gone.
debm55
(61,883 posts)hall and hit him. I can remember the screaming.
genxlib
(6,163 posts)Our Elementary and Middle school deans were terrifying and used to regularly spank kids with a solid piece of wood the size of a cricket bat. And yes it had holes for the extra sting.
It was barbaric...
But, then again, if I had to put up with hundreds of kids....
Bayard
(30,352 posts)Big thick wooden things, about two ft. long. The principle had the one that could launch a boy into outer space (girls didn't get spanked--we stood in the corner.) I would say now that most of those boys had some version of ADHD. There was one kid that scared the crap out of me in third grade. He thought he was a robot, complete with sound effects, and his industrial lunchbox was his motor. He got walluped pretty often.
sboatcar
(871 posts)No padding, nothing. Sure a few kids every year broke arms and collarbones, but it was fun.
debm55
(61,883 posts)The scrathes and bruises it came with.
JoseBalow
(9,747 posts)
debm55
(61,883 posts)sakabatou
(46,391 posts)Most catalogues were at least partly digital in my elementary days.
3catwoman3
(29,831 posts)OldBaldy1701E
(11,593 posts)The coveted job was to be the one who hit the button to flip to the next frame. The record would go 'BOOOP' and you would hit the button on the controller and it would flip.
If you were one of the technically proficient kids, you usually set the thing up and took it down as well. That usually removed you from contention of being a 'button pusher', but one could still do both depending on the situation.
(The real coveted thing was the be the one to roll the cart back to the library/AV room. Running down the halls like bats out of hell trying to race the other classroom cart as it was being returned as well as the bell. You wanted to be back in the classroom when that went off.)
debm55
(61,883 posts)RockRaven
(19,775 posts)the edge with Arabic numerals, with three metal tabs of varying length and widths mounted on a central axis around which they rotate at different rates, under glass (or equivalent).
debm55
(61,883 posts)lastlib
(28,661 posts).... for the small slow one to get to three, and the faster middle one to get to the 2...... and when it did, we all exploded out of our seats and went home!! YAY!! (we didn't care about the really fast long one....)
Now the d@&% things are digitial.....
DBoon
(25,159 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)OldBaldy1701E
(11,593 posts)These days, there is no actual ringing bell to mark class periods. They use tones from the intercom or the like for most places. At the school where I used to work, it was all about tones. Heck, we had a catalog of recorded prayers and chants to use as well. (Catholic school.)
I know that even when I was a senior, my school had replaced the bells with that kind of thing. I used to be able to imitate the sound.
Got us out of class early on a few occasions.
I guarantee that a child today would jump out of their skin if they heard the old fashioned bells go off. Especially during a fire drill.
debm55
(61,883 posts)in a beautiful shine. Yes , those fire alarms. Half of the little ones would be holding their ears and crying.
johnp3907
(4,342 posts)They'd be freaked out by being asked to put their lunch scraps into buckets so the Principal could feed it to the hogs on her farm!
debm55
(61,883 posts)LoisB
(13,537 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)ProfessorGAC
(77,324 posts)...are very legitimate, there are several listed that are much more common than thought.
Pull down screens, pencils, cursive, civics, blackboards & chalk, sharpeners...
I see those 75-90% of the time when I sub.
I even go to 3 schools with uniforms!!
debm55
(61,883 posts)rurallib
(64,844 posts)and featured some incredible wood work. Stairs, doors, windows and of course the desks with their flip up lids.I don't think anything like that still exists.
Sure it was a major fire hazard, but it was sure beautiful.
debm55
(61,883 posts)Niagara
(12,155 posts)I don't know if it's generational or pertaining to certain demographics. People in their 80's and 90's talk about grade schools that were numbered. Example: PS (Public School) #1 or PS (Public School)#45. When I went to grade school and my children went to grade school, the schools had names and were not numbered.
Metal lunch boxes discontinued by lunch box manufacturers and banned by schools, mainly due to kids beating each other up with metal lunch boxes. Not always the case, but generally.
Scratch and sniff stickers on perfect or nearly perfect quizes, tests and specific homework papers.
Paper grade cards in manilla envelopes that were used the entire school year. Today it's digital grades.
Do they still have music and art classes in grade school today? I don't know.
Also: Lunch Lady Peanut Butter/Chocolate Bars. They were the breakfast bomb at my grade school, I don't care what anyone else says about the the breakfast bars either. If anyone says "yuck/gross/barf" I'm just going to assume that person is insane.
debm55
(61,883 posts)and sniff stickers. Haven't seen those in ages.Someone told me that they were made from toxic ingredients. I have my favorite as a teacher---scented markers. red was cherry, blue was blueberry and so on.Loved them. and so did the kids.
intheflow
(30,256 posts)made of metal, set over pavement, no shade to speak of. As if getting burned from the the hot metal and occasional road rash from crashing onto the pavement while vying for space on the monkey bars wasn't bad enough, we also had "merry-go-round" that either sucked kids underneath them or made kids puke from spinning immediately after lunch. Fun times!

debm55
(61,883 posts)One of my legs got stuck in the darn thing. the other leg got dragged on the asphalt. Had a very bad brush burn for my ankle to my hip.
Niagara
(12,155 posts)and I had blood all the way down this light purple spring jacket that I had. None of the recess supervisors walked me down to the nurses station to make sure that I didn't pass out.
I received 3 stitches in the E.R. This was way before they used glue for stitches.
My mom forbade me to ever hang out on the Merry Go Round after that.
debm55
(61,883 posts)Niagara
(12,155 posts)Harker
(18,182 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)Harker
(18,182 posts)She was known to express displeasure with kids by digging her thumbnail into their chins.
Luckily for me, we moved to Colorado after third grade.
debm55
(61,883 posts)Golden Raisin
(4,757 posts)(from grade school through high school) but closely followed by: My High School had 2 buildings: the original (old) built in 1927 and the new circa 1960. The old building had very tall wood framed windows, almost 2 stories high with inserted glass windows. In order to open or close the top windows, the teacher used a VERY long, sturdy wooden pole with a brass clasp on the end to latch onto the window and open/close it. We had one strict Math teacher who, when he sensed the class was drifting off and not paying attention, would suddenly and noisily SLAM the pole on one of the front desks producing a mighty, noisy, cracking sound. We all woke up real fast.
debm55
(61,883 posts)fargone
(655 posts)On Fridays we got goiter pills (iodine) from a big brown jar kept in the teacher's desk. A different student got to pass them out each week. They had a chocolaty taste.
debm55
(61,883 posts)no_hypocrisy
(55,432 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)sheshe2
(98,528 posts)"Duck and cover" is a method of personal protection against the effects of a nuclear explosion.
Then again, today they have shooting drills and those are from the enemy within.
Odd, but not so odd.
Sorry to be a downer, I am just so depressed.
debm55
(61,883 posts)depression most of my adult life. Love you, Debbie.
sheshe2
(98,528 posts)greatauntoftriplets
(179,375 posts)At least for those of us who went to Catholic schools.
debm55
(61,883 posts)and the swinging rosary
greatauntoftriplets
(179,375 posts)I was in high school when the nuns went into modified habits and their new veils showed some hair. Someone noticed that everyone had the same hair color.
That order were a lot more relaxed, and did not use rulers except to measure things.
debm55
(61,883 posts)greatauntoftriplets
(179,375 posts)Even back when I was in high school, the nuns had a standing order at a local liquor store. It wasn't for sacramental wine.
efhmc
(17,003 posts)greatauntoftriplets
(179,375 posts)Now the few nuns left in that convent have been known to join anti-TACO protests.
some_of_us_are_sane
(3,645 posts)
Chalk holder to hold 5 sticks of chalk to draw musical staffs on blackboard.
debm55
(61,883 posts)applegrove
(133,182 posts)sweetest lady in the elevator at my parents retirement home. Everyone called her Bunny. She was warm and friendly. When she died I read her obituary in the lobby and it turns out she had been my piano teacher for 3 or 4 years. I don't have a memory for faces and I had grown since I last saw her. I so regretted I did not recognize her. She was so fine a person.
debm55
(61,883 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)sakabatou
(46,391 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)applegrove
(133,182 posts)Basically your legs would fight another person's legs until they were caught and would let go and hit the ground. No way they have those any more.
everyonematters
(4,263 posts)I remember some very cold mornings. My parents never drove me to school. It was about a quarter of a mile.
debm55
(61,883 posts)don't think people would do that now.
Eugene
(67,345 posts)elementary school, early 70's:
● warmer spring and fall months
● safety patrols out; find your own way back
● bring your lunch and eat in class during winter
That all ended around 1974 when in-school lunches were served in class.
debm55
(61,883 posts)Mother was watching TV.
Beemans, Blackjack, Teaberry and Clove.
debm55
(61,883 posts)area51
(12,762 posts)FM123
(10,386 posts)Considered pretty high-tech way back in the day.....
debm55
(61,883 posts)CTyankee
(68,511 posts)I was in legally mandated segregated schools in Texas before Brown. v. Bd. of Ed.
debm55
(61,883 posts)Morbius
(1,120 posts)There was one black child in every classroom, and 29 white children. So they could call it "integrated," I realize in retrospect.
The principal had a paddle, which he would use when he felt the need. I very much doubt they still use corporal punishment. My parents enthusiastically supported this.
reACTIONary
(7,314 posts).... on the teacher's desk.
debm55
(61,883 posts)reACTIONary
(7,314 posts)Take note: If you put something in angle brackets... it disappears from the post.
debm55
(61,883 posts)GreenWave
(12,817 posts)...refused to sail over the entire building...
debm55
(61,883 posts)GreenWave
(12,817 posts)displacedvermoter
(5,022 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)OLDMDDEM
(3,288 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)Old-8643
(26 posts)classroom to hallway then squat and cover your head because that will save you!
Even at 8 years old my classmates knew what a joke it all was.
We would say bend over and kiss your ass goodbye.
Here is another, that red stuff they would cover kid puke with.
Dunce caps?
Cleaning Blackboards?
Mimeograph smell?
The Pledge of Allegiance?
debm55
(61,883 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)LudwigPastorius
(15,037 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)Ilsa
(64,590 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)jmowreader
(53,416 posts)The school I went to had a set of records - the kind you put on a record player - of a man sitting there reading off math problems with just a few seconds between each problem.
It was like "3 plus 2" pause a couple seconds, "6 + 9" pause a couple seconds...
They had a set for each grade. I didn't start at this school until third grade, and at that level you got five seconds per problem. By the time you got to sixth grade you got half that much time. And these fucking records were a huge part of your grade.
These records are the reason I only took one year of math in high school.
debm55
(61,883 posts)Grade, We had flash cards, I didn't like those either.
retread
(3,935 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)u4ic
(17,137 posts)I've lived near so many elementary schools, and for the past couple of decades, the amount of kids walking to school is minute. My mother walked me to kindergarten every day, and then for grade 1 and beyond, it was just me. 1970's. I lived about a km away from my elementary school (actually grades 1-8, so included junior high as well).
Also those icky pink pills to show you where you still needed to brush your teeth. They were rancid 🤮
debm55
(61,883 posts)some_of_us_are_sane
(3,645 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)Last edited Fri May 8, 2026, 12:24 PM - Edit history (1)
cloak?"
some_of_us_are_sane
(3,645 posts)
debm55
(61,883 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)Polly Hennessey
(8,980 posts)Gym class and the long rope hanging from the ceiling. We had to shimmy up the rope and then move down. The PE teacher would be shouting, go higher. If you slid down you would have rope burns on your hands. Such fun! 😆
debm55
(61,883 posts)Old-8643
(26 posts)I was small for my age, but I had strong arms. I was able to scale that rope fast all the way to the truss, then I stayed up there for a couple minuets. My coach was not happy with me shouting "come down from there"
These days I have a real diversion to height, go figure.
One of those rare times I was the best! Thanks for the memories.
debm55
(61,883 posts)not to touch the radiator.
prodigitalson
(3,209 posts)It today's middle schoolers Id like to send to the 1970s
debm55
(61,883 posts)NNadir
(38,588 posts)debm55
(61,883 posts)LudwigPastorius
(15,037 posts)SRA cards?

debm55
(61,883 posts)oasis
(54,026 posts)pledge of allegiance to the flag.
