一些大学生的测试水平仅相当于10岁儿童。
Some College Students Are Testing At The Level Of 10-Year-Olds

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/some-college-students-are-testing-level-10-year-olds

经合组织(OECD)近期对38个高收入国家进行的一项调查显示,大学生学术水平正令人担忧地下降。数据显示,8%的学生阅读能力仅相当于或低于十岁儿童的水平,其中美国和以色列的数据分别高达14%和21%。数学表现同样滞后,全球有9%的大学生仍处于小学水平。 专家将这种下滑归因于多种因素,包括疫情导致的学习差距、大学入学标准降低以及公共资金投入减少。此外,生成式人工智能在课堂上的广泛使用也被认为进一步削弱了学术严谨性。 尽管这场危机错综复杂,但初步证据表明,限制技术使用或许是一个可行的解决方案。在明尼阿波利斯的一间教室里,通过禁止使用电子设备并回归传统的纸笔教学,学生对阅读能力的信心在短短五个月内从46%跃升至95%。这些发现凸显了一个紧迫的需求:在大学期望与学生能力之间的差距进一步拉大之前,必须解决现代教育体系中的系统性缺陷。

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原文

Via Futurism,

Are you smarter than a 4th grader?

Gone are the days of university freshmen reading classical philosophers like Plato or contemporary pedagogues like Ta-Nehisi Coates. These days, incoming college students are lucky if they can get through Judy Blume’s “Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing.”

According to a new “Survey of Adult Skills” conducted by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development - a forum for 38 high-income, predominantly Western countries - a not insignificant number of adult students enrolled in higher education are now reading and doing math at a level which, in a more functional society, would be alarming for a middle schooler.

The survey, first spotted by the Economist, tested around 160,000 people of all ages, across all 38 member states. It found that across all OECD member countries, a full 8 percent of college students are reading at the level of a ten-year-old, if not worse. While countries like Germany and France rang in at under 5 percent, countries like Poland, Israel, and the United States blew the curve at 21, 20, and 14 percent, respectively.

The numbers aren’t much better when it comes to math.

Across OECD countries, 9 percent of college students do math at or below a ten-year-old level. In Italy, the US, and Slovakia, that figure jumps to over 15 percent — only outdone by Israel, where roughly 21 percent of college students were underachieving at the same low benchmark.

It seems there are numerous compounding explanations for these test results: pandemic-era learning gaps leading to lower levels of preparation, declining college enrollment forcing schools to lower admissions standards, and lower levels of public funding for education, to name a few.

The results also coincide with the explosion of large language models like ChatGPT, which by many accounts have carved out a new floor for academic failure in both K-12 and college-level education.

While there’s no denying how complicated the issue is, there is evidence that removing technology from classrooms altogether could offer an immediate boost.

In one classroom in Minneapolis, for example, a literature and English teacher banned phones and laptops, requiring all coursework to be done on pencil and paper.

As the school-year started in September, just 46 percent of the students involved said they felt confident about their reading skills. A few months later in February, that number stood at 95 percent.

Though it’s just one classroom, something is clearly off the rails in the education systems of the richest countries of the world — and the longer it goes unaddressed, the more students will be pushed into the world with the reading skills of 4th graders.

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