I agree with this, but I disagree with those who spread a false narrative that generalizes everyone — that’s simply not true. Instead of calling our people dumb or incompetent, why not focus on providing real solutions? What’s wrong with recognizing genuine merit? Providing good education and recognizing there are authentically competitive, smart young people are not in conflict. |
Grinding != Intelligence. |
| Just because kids are 'educated' and graduate with good grades/testing, does not guarantee intelligence. For the most part, i believe kids today are less smart. They know how to perform for the rote AP curriculum and know how to prep for standardized testing that is far easier today. Despite all the '21st century critical thinking skills' verbiage, kids today are less able to read and critically think and write. K-12 curriculum has been hijacked by the far left/right and imposes bias in selected readings and questions. Chat gpt use is pervasive. For both summarizing readings, writing and even for solving advanced math. Social media exacerbates the issue bc these poorly educated kids are more vulnerable to misinformation. I say this as a mom with ivy kids. Kids today may look and sound impressive, but the intellect is a bit smoke and mirrors when you dive beneath the surface. |
What you described is a global phenomenon — technology has certainly contributed to what some call “brain rot” among young people. However, it’s also worth asking why some parents aren’t setting the right example to help prevent this. It’s not solely the school’s responsibility to ensure that children think critically or use their brains productively. The only reason I posted this is because I see the media pushing a false narrative — possibly to give employers an excuse not to hire Americans or to justify relying on imported labor through programs like H-1B. I don’t know their true motive, but one thing is clear: it’s simply not true to generalize that Americans are dumb. Period. |
Are these like your feelings or did you actually look at the data? |
Cue the MAGAs... |
When 50% of the students are not performing, we need to recognize that we have failed them. I'm never in favor of calling kids dumb. That's is counterproductive and it doesn't achieve anything. However, they are NOT performing at the level they should be. That's our failure, not theirs. Our kids would be competitive and perform just as well if we demanded it of them. |
| Voucher a-holes want to defund public schools and constantly push this narrative. |
Yes, there are tons of reference you can look into, IQ (mind you, look only the top percentile, not all), PISA, or even the SAT score from top to the bottom of each schools... it is not hard |
What if academics just aren’t their thing? Not everyone needs to be a math genius to be a capable, contributing citizen, right? I do agree, though, that everyone should have a solid foundation in basic arithmetic, reading, and critical thinking. |
+1 |
Actually, it is hard. I was asking about this statement specifically "I’m fairly confident that the best students in the U.S. can easily outperform those from other countries." Can you provide what data you looked at and what countries you compared to come up with that conclusion? |
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MAGA is proof a significant portion of the IS are idiots can not do math or read cognitively.
Trumps $2000 propaganda or his percentage statements the morons believe him. Most Americans didn’t read project 2025 and yet it literally destroyes their lives. We suck at education |
Basic level math and reading is not "genius level." Everyone should be able to read and do basic math by the time they graduate HS. |
Sparknotes, Litcharts, Cliffsnotes, Brainly, Numerade, Chegg, Socratic… And I’m a ‘98 baby. You’d need to go pre-internet if these are real concerns. |