Teaching Clock

Sale price R 46.99 ZAR Regular price R 94.95

 

The Wooden Teaching Clock is a beautifully simple, hands-on tool designed to help children learn to read analogue time, one of the most meaningful real-world skills we can give a child. With independently movable hour and minute hands, children can set, explore, and practise time in a concrete, tactile way that no digital clock will ever replicate. It comes with a handy magnetic stand so it can sit right where learning happens.

What's included:

  • 1 × Round wooden teaching clock (15 cm diameter)
  • Colour-coded hour markers, each hour 1–12 has its own bright colour-coded dot for visual discrimination
  • Independently movable orange hour hand and teal minute hand
  • Three concentric learning rings on the face:
    • Outer ring: Hours 1–12 in large black numerals with colourful markers
    • Middle ring: 24-hour time (13–24) in smaller numerals
    • Inner ring: Minutes marked in 5-minute increments (5-60)
  • 1 × Magnetic stand

What our OT says:

Telling the time on an analogue clock is far more cognitively complex than most people assume and it's increasingly being lost to the digital age. This clock puts it back in children's hands, literally.

Reading an analogue clock requires a child to integrate several neurological processes at once: number recognition, sequencing, spatial reasoning, and the abstract concept that the same numbers carry different meanings depending on which hand is pointing at them. That's a lot of mental work and it's exactly the kind of layered learning that builds strong neural pathways.

From an OT perspective, the act of physically moving the hands is what makes this tool so valuable. Rather than passively watching a clock, children use their fingers to turn and position the hands, engaging fine motor control, bilateral coordination, and proprioceptive feedback all at once. This multi-sensory approach anchors the learning in the body, not just the mind.

The magnetic stand makes it wonderfully portable, equally at home in a therapy room, classroom, kitchen counter, or homework space. I particularly love using this in daily routines: "Can you set the clock to show when we're leaving?" That kind of embedded, purposeful practice is where real learning sticks.

What makes this clock exceptional is its three-ring face design. The outer ring shows standard 1–12 hours; the middle ring introduces 24-hour time, a skill that becomes essential for travel, digital devices, and school timetables; and the inner ring shows minutes in 5-minute increments, making the abstract concept of "past" and "to" visually concrete.

The colour-coded hour markers are a particularly thoughtful inclusion: for children with visual processing difficulties or those just beginning to track the hands, the colours act as a scaffold, reducing cognitive load while confidence builds.

Other ways to play:

The teaching clock is more versatile than it first appears. Here are some ways to make it come alive beyond basic time-reading:

  • Daily routine anchors: Set the clock to show breakfast time, school time, or bath time to help children understand and anticipate their day
  • Beat the clock challenges: Call out a time and see who can set the hands correctly first,  great for siblings or small groups
  • Story time prompts:  Use during book reading ("What time do you think it is in this story?") to connect abstract time concepts to narrative
  • "What were we doing at...?" Review the day by setting the clock to different times and recalling what the family was doing, builds time awareness and memory
  • Half past / quarter to games: Call out "half past three!" and let your child set it, then swap roles for a confidence boost
  • Pretend play: Incorporate into a toy kitchen, school setup, or doctor's office as a working clock prop that adds real function to imaginative play