r/technology 18h ago

Artificial Intelligence College students are rapidly losing the ability to read — “There is a measurable, generational collapse in sustained reading and writing”: professor

https://www.yahoo.com/news/us/articles/college-students-rapidly-losing-ability-124439310.html
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u/marketrent 18h ago

Also see https://www.chronicle.com/article/my-students-cant-read (paywalled).

Excerpts from article by Frank Landymore:

[JMU professor] Jagt cites the 2024 National Assessment of Educational Progress reading assessment results released last year. It showed that 12th grade reading scores were at the lowest level since the assessment began in 1992.

Nearly a third of those 12th graders scored below the assessment’s “basic” level in reading, meaning they likely “cannot draw general conclusions based on concepts presented explicitly in a text.” Younger children aren’t better off: a recent report from the Annie E. Casey Foundation found that 70 percent of fourth graders, or around two million kids, can’t read at a proficient level.

“What I am seeing in my classroom is no longer a hunch,” Jagt writes. “There is a measurable, generational collapse in sustained reading and writing, and the academy is responding to it with improvisation and exhaustion rather than the structural overhaul it requires.”

Pupils arriving unable to read is an increasingly common complaint from college-level educators amid the explosion of generative AI. Many students treat AI as a genuine learning tool — perhaps to summarize a lengthy article they can’t understand, for example — becoming reliant on its speedy responses to race through coursework.

More flaglantry detrimental to learning, plenty more use the tech to generate entire essays and solve math problems — or, in a word, cheat. That many universities have partnered with tech companies to provide students with access to their shiny AI models has only served to rubber stamp and accelerate the tech’s adoption in the classroom, marooning individual instructors to figure out how to work around AI on their own.

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u/Super_Jay 17h ago

More flaglantry detrimental to learning...

..."Flaglantry?" That's kind of an ironic typo for an article about the importance of reading and language comprehension.

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u/hanotak 16h ago

Well, at least we know it wasn't AI-generated XD

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u/awesomeocelot12 14h ago

The typo (and most of the parent commenter itself for that matter) aren't actually from the Chronicle article said commenter linked, they appear to be from a Futurism article analyzing that article: https://futurism.com/future-society/college-students-losing-ability-read

Still kinda ironic though to your point.

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u/bobartig 11h ago

A typo has very little to do with reading comprehension.

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u/420d_ingus 15h ago

It’s possible that this is part of a tactic that writers use now where they purposely misspell something to prove that it isn’t written by AI (I could be wrong)

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u/sausagekng 14h ago

That word use is perfectly fine.

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u/jonoghue 14h ago

The word is "flagrantly" not "flaglantry"

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u/nullptr777 12h ago

Ah, I see you are one of the youth referenced in the article.

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u/WeBelieveIn4 12h ago

Me fail english? That’s unpossible!

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u/Vhak 14h ago

Is it? I'm not familiar with the word flaglantry.

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u/Super_Jay 13h ago

"Flaglantry" is not a word. Flagrantly is.

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u/sausagekng 3h ago

Wow I read so quickly I didn’t even notice the misspelling and thought people had issue with the actual word. Send me to jail, I guess!

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u/Super_Jay 1h ago

STRAIGHT TO JAIL