26.2 C
Lagos
Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Gen Z now world’s dumbest generation — Report

Share this:

A recent study suggests Generation Z (Gen Z), born between 1997 and 2010, is “less cognitively capable” than other generations due to excessive technology use.

Neuroscientist Jared Cooney Horvath stated that Gen Z exhibits lower intelligence levels, weak attention spans, poor problem-solving skills, and reduced reading and math abilities.

He stated this while addressing the United States Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.

“A sad fact our generation has to face is that our kids are less cognitively capable than we were at their age. Every generation has outperformed their parents until Gen Z,” Mr Horvath told the New York Post.

READ ALSO:  Pentagon holds off on strike despite B-2 bombers deployment

He added: “Most of these young people are overconfident about how smart they are. The smarter people think they are, the dumber they actually are.”

Scoring lower academic grades than the Millennials, the preceding age group, Mr Horvath argued that teenagers spend excessive hours on screen devices rather than engaging in deep, face-to-face interactions.

“More than half of the time a teenager is awake, half of it is spent staring at a screen. Humans are biologically programmed to learn from other humans and from deep study, not flipping through screens for bullet point summaries,” Mr Horvath said.

READ ALSO:  Former FIFA President Sepp Blatter Calls for Boycott of 2026 World Cup in US Amid Global Security Concerns

“What do kids do on computers? They skim. So rather than determining what we want our children to do and gearing education towards that, we are redefining education to better suit the tool. That is not progress; that is surrender,” he noted.

Mr Horvath said the underperformance has been observed in no fewer than 80 countries, as academic excellence has reduced, resulting from the unregulated adoption of digital technology in classrooms.

“The answer appears to be the tools we are using within schools to drive that learning. If you look at the data, once countries adopt digital technology widely in schools, performance goes down significantly,” the neuroscientist stated.

READ ALSO:  THISDAY Newspaper celebrates 30th anniversary 

“Across 80 countries, if you look at the data, once countries adopt digital technology widely in schools, performance goes down significantly,” he said.

The study noted that the arbitrary use of technological devices like phones, tablets, and laptops during real-time studying has turned students into skimmers.

Horvath suggested governments should formulate policies to help future generations, like Gen Alpha, maximize their cognitive abilities.

 

Share this:
RELATED NEWS
- Advertisment -

Latest NEWS

Trending News

Get Notifications from DDM News Yes please No thanks