The postcard contrasted past and future schooling. Things that have come true include: special school buildings where many children go together, printed books (real paper books), and widespread use of technology in homes and schools. These match developments in our present century.
Many of the things pictured on the postcard have come true: schools in special buildings, children going to school together, printed books, teachers who are human (not machines), and classroom teaching. In addition, technology (televisions, machines) and mass-produced books exist.
This is an opinion-based question. The answer lists realistic educational trends expected in the next 20–50 years: adaptive technology, blended learning, VR/AR usage, fewer printed materials, collaborative spaces, and skills-based curricula.
Possible future changes: more digital and personalized learning (AI tutors, adaptive lessons), flexible classrooms and remote/hybrid learning, reduced paper use (e-books), greater use of virtual/augmented reality for experiments and field trips, emphasis on collaborative and project-based learning, and more focus on life and digital skills.
1. The line refers to Margie, who kept getting geography tests from the mechanical teacher. 2. The round little man with a red face is the repairman/technician who came with tools to fix the mechanical teacher. 3. Margie had been hoping the mechanical teacher would be taken away. 4–5. Both are lines from the old book's description (narrator) explaining how old schools worked: pupils learned the same things and went to a special building.
1. Margie 2. The repairman/technician (the man who came to adjust the mechanical teacher) 3. Margie 4. (Narrator / description in the old book) — referring to children in old schools 5. (Narrator / description in the old book) — referring to old schools
(i) schools (ii) real book (iii) yellow and crinkly (iv) words (v) millions of books (vi) attic (vii) geography (viii) test papers (ix) person (x) same things (xi) school time (xii) house (xiii) spending
(i) schools (ii) real book (iii) yellow and crinkly (iv) words (v) millions of books (vi) attic (vii) geography (viii) test papers (ix) person (x) same things (xi) school time (xii) house (xiii) spending
Contrast based on story: Margie studied at home with a mechanical teacher, using televised words; children in present-day schools attend a building, have human teachers, printed books and peer interaction. The answers are concise differences as required.
Examples of differences:
- Margie's teacher: a mechanical machine; Your teacher: a human being.
- Margie's books (in that era): few or no printed books used at home screen/televised words; Your school: uses printed textbooks and digital resources.
- Margie's 'school': at home (schoolroom) with a mechanical teacher; Your school: a separate school building with classmates and human teachers.
- Margie's lessons: scheduled strictly at fixed times by mother and machine; Your school: fixed bell times but with more flexible activities and group work.
- Margie's interaction: isolated learning from a machine; Your school: face-to-face group learning and social interaction.
1. Tommy discovered the book in his attic.
2. The book was a real, printed book with yellowing pages — unfamiliar to Margie who used televised lessons.
3. Margie's mechanical teacher repeatedly gave her geography tests (she kept failing).
4. Margie's mother enforced a strict schedule: little girls had to be at their lessons at the set time (e.g., five fifteen).
5. The geography sector of the mechanical teacher worked slowly (it was slow), causing errors and repeated tests.
1. Tommy found the old book.
2. Margie was surprised because the book was a real printed book on paper — something she had never seen (from the past).
3. The mechanical teacher was giving Margie test after test in geography.
4. Margie had to study at the same time every day because her mother said little girls must be in their places at the fixed time (they must be in school at five fifteen).
5. The geography sector in the mechanical teacher was slow.
Answers are concise essay-style responses (about 125–150 words each) based on the story 'The Fun They Had'. Each response describes: (1) the mechanical teacher and the solitary home classroom, (2) Margie's dislike for the mechanized, scheduled learning and her later curiosity about communal schooling, and (3) why the printed book and the idea of human teachers and group schooling seemed strange to Margie.
1. Margie's mechanical teacher was a large, black, box-like machine with a viewing screen and lots of circuits. It delivered lessons on the screen and monitored Margie’s answers, administering tests and recording results. The device had different subject sectors (geography sector, etc.) and a slot where homework or test papers were inserted. The classroom was her schoolroom at home — a small room with the mechanical teacher standing in it. There were no classmates; lessons were individualized by the machine on a fixed schedule set by her mother. The atmosphere was impersonal and rigid, governed by the machine’s programmed routine.
2. Margie hated her school because learning was mechanical and isolating: she had to study alone at a precise time every day, and the machine repeatedly gave her failing geography tests, which embarrassed and frustrated her. There was no human teacher, no play, and no classmates to share and discuss lessons with. At the end of the story Margie felt a nostalgic curiosity and envy toward the idea of old schools where children learned together and had fun. She thought about how children in the past enjoyed going to a special building and spending time together, which seemed delightful to her.
3. The 'book' was strange because it was a real printed book with pages — yellow and crinkly — unlike anything Margie was used to; her lessons came as moving words on a screen. The book described old-fashioned schools where children attended together and learned the same things in a building. Margie found it strange because she could not imagine a person (a human teacher) standing and teaching children, nor could she understand why children would go to a common building to study; both ideas were alien to her machine-based, home-bound education.