"I graduated â23 and there were many seniors who still couldnât read aloud. No one in my hs actually cared about learning either, just cheat on everything and use tik-tok in class."
i graduated in 2021 and majority of the people in my english class could not write a grammatically correct sentence or read out loud. it wasnât everyone, but i knew so many people who wouldnât and i do now. i have noticed a lot of my younger friends have a lot less reading comprehension. i am in the south, but it definitely varies state to state, and even city to city.
âOverly standardized public education that forces teachers to get through a certain amount of material at a certain pace with very little flexibility, and pressure to pass kids to the next grade even if they arenât ready. Itâs been a growing problem since the 2000s because schools have to meet certain metrics so they are passing kids to the next grade and then because they arenât ready for the next grade, they canât learn the material in that year properly, and then it repeats, and so on, all the way until you get to high school and you have 15 year olds than canât read. The pandemic just spiked the problem intensely though. It basically took an issue that develops in kids for years and compounded that years long issue into one year. Kids lost so much learning online.â
76% of Gen Zers report that they are concerned about losing their jobs to ChatGPT. Most entry-level jobs are seen as launchpads for Gen Z careers - and thatâs where AI is moving in. The lower-level launchpad is in jeopardy, as AI technology targets âjunior-level jobsâ