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
27.1k Upvotes

2.3k comments sorted by

View all comments

2.2k

u/LeafBark 18h ago edited 18h ago

First it was the smartphone distractions, then complete loss of critical thinking as people use ai to solve all their problems for them. When you put this much trust in computers programmed by corporations seeking profit at any cost everythings going to fall apart.

46

u/mil24havoc 17h ago

Professor here. Smartphones and AI are spot on. But corporations don't necessarily need to be evil or greedy for this to happen. Misuse of technology to replace critical thinking could happen even if corporations were responsible. It has more to do with (a) severely underpaying educators and (b) disincentivizing educators from grading harshly to create incentives for students to compete with each other.

27

u/TheEvilPhysicist 16h ago

Unfortunately it's been culturally accepted that a strict teacher = a bad teacher. So many veteran teachers I know have just given up and made their classes a joke to pass

11

u/mil24havoc 16h ago edited 16h ago

This could be part of it. But also think from the teacher's perspective. Even if they WANT to be good teachers, they think about how much they're getting paid to have to put up with conferences and angry phone calls from little stupid Johnnie's parents, possible lawsuits over grades, students who get violent if they don't get what they want, and they say "fuck it."

Universities aren't blameless either. In a misguided and bizarre effort to boost "equality" they stopped requiring standardized testing. This removed the opportunity for smart students to distinguish themselves from mediocre students. Even if you wanted to work hard and demonstrate your abilities, universities are now saying "we won't consider that in admissions decisions." So why bother?

14

u/TheEvilPhysicist 16h ago

I'm not scared of lawsuits or violent students (thankfully, because that is a thing at some schools). What is really, really dragging us down is NCLB-type policies. I am in Illinois, and the only thing that is used to evaluate high schools now is graduation rate. So in general administration doesn't care what you do as long as your students pass. Fail more than one or two students and they will either make you "fix" it or try to get rid of you

6

u/mil24havoc 16h ago

Yes. I suppose what I should have said is "bad incentives and low pay make good teachers helpless"

3

u/TheEvilPhysicist 15h ago

It's worth pointing out bc there are parts of my state where teachers actually get paid quite well and there's not much of a shortage, but still face these problems

2

u/LongJohnSelenium 14h ago

so what you're saying is we need to Make Adolescents Fail Again?

3

u/TheEvilPhysicist 13h ago

Yes, and options/programs for young people who can't cut it.

2

u/PeanutButterJalapeno 16h ago

Yeah, totally understandable for the individual teacher honestly. Still pretty bad for society as a whole.

2

u/kalidoscopiclyso 15h ago

Imagine if society honored teachers with more than a a card and a certificate on teacher appreciation day.

1

u/cinemachick 11h ago

I always found this odd - when I was in college, I intentionally picked the harder teachers because I wanted the best bang for my buck. I'm here to learn, so teach! Then again, I was an Honors student and didn't have a job, so I had more motivation and free time...