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donnie 03-25-2015 04:11 PM

American Millennials are among the world's least skilled
 

Surprised? So were the researchers who tested and compared workers in 23 countries.



We hear about the superior tech savvy of people born after 1980 so often that we tend to assume it must be true. But is it?



Researchers at Princeton-based Educational Testing Service (ETS) expected it to be when they administered a test called the Program for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC). Sponsored by the OECD, the test was designed to measure the job skills of adults, aged 16 to 65, in 23 countries.



When the results were analyzed by age group and nationality, ETS got a shock. It turns out, says a new report, that Millennials in the U.S. fall short when it comes to the skills employers want most: literacy (including the ability to follow simple instructions), practical math, and — hold on to your hat — a category called “problem-solving in technology-rich environments.”



Not only do Gen Y Americans lag far behind their overseas peers by every measure, but they even score lower than other age groups of Americans.



Take literacy, for instance. American Millennials scored lower than their counterparts in every country that participated except Spain and Italy. (Japan is No. 1.) In numeracy, meaning the ability to apply basic math to everyday situations, Gen Yers in the U.S. ranked dead last.



Okay, but what about making smart use of technology, where Millennials are said to shine? Again, America scored at the bottom of the heap, in a four-way tie for last place with the Slovak Republic, Ireland, and Poland.



Even the best-educated Millennials stateside couldn’t compete with their counterparts in Japan, Finland, South Korea, Belgium, Sweden, or elsewhere. With a master’s degree, for example, Americans scored higher in numeracy than peers in just three countries: Ireland, Poland, and Spain. Altogether, the top U.S. Gen Yers, in the 90th percentile, “scored lower than their counterparts in 15 countries,” the report notes, “and only scored higher than their peers in Spain.”



“We really thought [U.S.] Millennials would do better than the general adult population, either compared to older coworkers in the U.S. or to the same age group in other countries,” says Madeline Goodman, an ETS researcher who worked on the study. “But they didn’t. In fact, their scores were abysmal.”



What does that mean for U.S. employers hiring people born since 1980? Goodman notes that hiring managers shouldn’t overestimate the practical value of a four-year degree. True, U.S. Millennials with college credentials did score higher on the PIAAC than Americans with only a high school diploma (albeit less well than college grads in most other countries).



“But a degree may not be enough,” Goodman says, to prove that someone is adept with basic English, can do what she calls “workaday math,” or has the ability to use technology in a job. Curious about how the PIAAC measures those skills, or how you’d score yourself? Check out a few sample math questions, or take the whole test.



http://fortune.com/2015/03/10/americ...least-skilled/


I would like to say I'm surprised but I'm really not.

ScoupeLS 03-25-2015 04:16 PM

Not surprised in the least.

i8acobra 03-25-2015 11:33 PM

Speak to a Millennial for 10 minutes... Even if they're not dumb as a sack of rocks, they sound like it. Between the up-speak an vocal fry, I want to stab them in the neck.

Tibbi 03-26-2015 09:25 AM

You forgot skinny jeans :headshake:

187sks 03-26-2015 10:03 AM

Anyone who was born too late to see a C:/> prompt when they turned on a computer will have poorer technology skills than someone who had to work through the issues before everything was plug and play. It use to actually mean something just to be able to use a computer. All these kids today are surrounded by technology but few know how to do anything beyond use the provided interface.



It takes me about a half hour to build a PC today, and another half hour to install an OS. Almost every peripheral will automatically work when connected. This is great in a lot of ways, but the troubleshooting to get a pile of parts to actually function as a working PC definitely made it so you needed a deeper understanding of how computers work than you need today. Everyone at work thinks I'm a magician with computers because I understand well enough HOW they work that when an unexpected problem comes up that we've never seen before I can usually find the root cause quickly. "Tech people" today are usually just confused wondering which hardware of software to remove and replace.

Tibbi 03-26-2015 02:41 PM

:cliffs:


Originally Posted by 187sks (Post 704157)



https://31.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m...cc6bo1_500.gif

I though this topic needed more humor and less "git of meh lawn"

187sks 03-27-2015 12:35 PM

That link was +rep worthy. Brought my morning to a screeching halt. :hahaspit:


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