Monday, February 6, 2012
Casulaties of Modern Technology (6 of 12)_ The Calculator
Greetings to all our blog readers in Turku, Finland, and Kobe, Japan, or whereever else you might be today.
By happenstance, I came across the Little Professor* calculator I used in the third grade in 1979; alas, it no longer seems to function.
And, though calculators are still used to a varying degree, it seems safe to assume that they are indeed a Casualty of Modern Technology.
The modern calculators that were used to assist with basic math were first developed in the 1960s. Pocket-sized calculators came about a decade later in the 1970s. And, it was around the disco era, when calculators became both small and affordable for everyone, including elementary school students.
This, in turn, created a debate about whether calculators should be used in the classroom or not. Many math teachers feared that the calculator would diminsh student math skills. But, while the matter became more controversial in Europe, American school teachers gradually seemed to accept the likes of the Little Professor in the classroom.
As they evolved, calculators were also able to perform more advanced technigues, such as trigonometry and stats.
In 1986, according to Wikipedia, the calculator accounted for 41 percent of all general purpose hardware. But, by 2007, calculators accounted for less than 0.005 percent of general purpose hardware.
*-Whoops, we initially incorrectly referred to the Little Professor calculators as Mister Professor calculators!
Labels:
calculators,
Finland,
Japan,
Little Professor,
math,
Mister Professor
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