Old school tools

Old school tools derive from the terminology referring to tools used by past artisans. Old antique collectible wooden tools bought and sold.As a result, Cash is paid for quality equipment which has best value.  There is a e-commerce site for buying and selling old school tools.

If you are interested in acquiring or selling any tools, send them an email at the address listed below with a description of the item(s) you are looking to purchase or sell, and they will respond.

Any item references and description names should be included.

Old School Tools is headquartered in 636b Liverpool Rd, Southport, Merseyside, PR8 3BH, UK.The official website of Old School Tools is www.oldschooltools.co.uk. The revenue of Old School Tools is <$ 5 million. The technologies used by Old School Tools are: Presto, PHP, WooCommerce, WordPress.org.

If you could provide any images of any tools you might be selling and let them know where you are based in the nation that would be incredibly helpful.

The old school teaching tools

Classrooms have certainly changed a lot over the years, especially the technology we use to teach our lessons. What is sophisticated and revolutionary today is door to door tomorrow. The tools used as the main ingredient in each teacher’s arsenal eventually went the way of the dodo bird.So follow us on this trip down memory lane and see how many of these officially cool old learning tools you have in mind.

The lists are below –

  • VHS Player/TV cart

He was the best friend of every teacher of the day and there were only two of them in your school. In those days, they became more valuable than gold as a way to go on vacation, entertain students and give you a short lunch break.

  •  Trapper Keepers

Every great kid at school had one and it still reigns supreme as the easiest way to keep all your folders, papers, notebooks, pens, pencils and information safe and secure. Why did they stop making these again? I’ll kill for a trapper guard right now!

  • Calculators

First, there was the four-function calculator, and then the graphing calculator became all the rage. Now, they have all largely become obsolete. Remember when your math teacher told you how important it is to learn long divisions? .

  • Chalkboards

Before smart boards and dry eraser boards, the gold standard of teacher instruction was: chalkboard. They never stopped working when the power went out and the ink ran out. Of course, they made enough chalk dust to hold the breath of a camel.

  • Floppy disk

In earlier days, computers were not the most reliable storage units in the world, so teachers used to back up their entire educational lives on floppy disks, which would quickly disappear if they were within five feet of a magnet.

  • Cursive writing paper

The children would spend hours and hours with this paper. Practice loop and soup and try your best to perfect the art of curse writing. Now it mostly looks like hieroglyphics to them and we have all decided to go ahead with some weird print-cursive-hybrid writing… when we don’t just use our computers.

  • Encyclopedias

Have you just assigned a term paper and don’t know what to write about? Why not break down one of these 2,000-page books that go a little deeper into a whole bunch of random topics! Encyclopedias are big, heavy and rarely updated so if your research topic is in the 20th century. Hope, you got my point and wish you a good luck!

  •  Slide rule

If you’re really dating yourself you can say that you not only know what a slide rule is, but have actually used one. In the 50s and 60s, this little guy was the key to quickly breaking down all shapes and sizes of equations, but in the 70s it was mostly extinct when it came to calculators.

  •  Audio books/lessons on tape

Back before the mountain of resources that we now have at hand, learning a language involving putting on a huge pair of headphones, turning on a cassette and speaking in a very annoying voice for hours on end. Now we can ask millions where the bathroom is… and very few.

  • Overhead projectors

There was a time when overhead projectors were a symbol of technology. Project pictures directly on your board to see the whole world. Sure the pictures were a bit blurry and if you want to write on clarity you have to twist your body in a weird position. But at least the projector lamp can keep you warm on a cold day, since it was almost the temperature of the sun.

  • Flash cards

Want to memorize a bunch of math information? Why not break some classic old teaching tools – flashcards! A box of flashcards was a teacher’s portal for dozens of games and retention techniques. Now that we have quickly moved away from the recall model, the flashcards are a bit old.