Should we push it more? I have noticed cursive is becoming a foreign language, however That is an observation and this is on math. I work in an industry that thrived for almor 3/4 a century on fractionals, slide rulers and dial calipers and micrometers.
I accidentally knocked over locktite on my lyman dial caliper, I asked for another one from the matco truck and the guy had to dig and admitted no one buys those anymore or even knows how to read them, I could not understand why, the layout is simple in a dial, much easier than the vernier calipers I learned on, I am not even that old, only 33 yet I have watched entire sets of tools and math dissapear, I can only imagine how grumpy the seniors must be at this point.
Another one I dealt with was customers would bring middle school aged kids with them when waiting on repairs, I always lose it when I hear what do those hands mean and why does that clock not just say the time in straight numbers, I mean it is in fractions of 5 people between numbers, how hard is that?
Another one was doing multiplication and division without a calculator, I still can not fathom graduation highschool without doing this on paper, when I went through it was mandatory, if you could not do this without a calculator you were doomed to be a ditch digger at best, now it seems everyone comes out like this, like standards were dumbed down with the assumption tech will wipe your a## for you and knowledge is a waste of time.
I think we need to bring back more hard math, hand writing on paper, using a slide rule and understanding dials guages fractions etc as it seems like at the current rate we might have to start importing people from other nations to do even the most basic of tasks due to how bad basic skills are being sidelined for tech, remember tech is only as good as those who create it and work on it, if the tech is smarter than those who use it it is doomed to fail.