Business America is failing to prepare Gen Z to enter the workforce due to a ‘glaring’ gap in tech skills - GenZ's face when a job is more than taking selfies and attending mid morning pilates?

Article

Computer classes for Gen Z aren't cutting it anymore.

Many new digital tools entered the workforce recently, and while there is yet to be something as futuristic as flying cars or self-lacing shoes (as predicted in Back to the Future's depiction of 2015), there are still some new-fangled inventions that have been implemented. As remote work took the nation by storm during the early pandemic, digital tools like Zoom and Teams were used more frequently. And with investments pouring into artificial intelligence, the world of A.I. is also seeping into the workforce as automated programs like ChatGPT take off.

Less invested in than weird A.I. portraits or automated messaging systems that tell you everything is subjective: Gen Zers. While companies are rapidly changing to become more digitized and automated, the youngest working generation isn’t being trained adequately to deal with this new reality.


More than a third (37%) of Gen Zers feel their school education didn't prepare them with the digital skills they need to propel their career, according to Dell Technologies' international survey of more than 15,000 adults ages 18 to 26 across 15 countries. A majority (56%) of this generation added that they had very basic to no digital skills education.

It’s all led to some warranted skepticism regarding the future of work: Many Gen Zers are unsure what the digital economy will look like, and 33% have little to no confidence that the government’s investments in a digital future will be successful in 10 years. Forty-four percent think that schools and businesses should work together to address the digital skills gap.

Gen Z's skills gap could be why they feel 'tech shame' at work​


The findings back up past research that found nearly half of the Class of 2022 felt the top skill they were underprepared for was technical skills.

It may all come as a surprise considering that Gen Z are digital natives. That means they’re often assumed to be the most technologically proficient in the workplace and assigned the work of explaining new tools to their colleagues, which stresses Gen Z out. As many as 1 in 5 young workers feel judged for having tech issues, whereas only 1 in 25 of their older peers report feeling similarly, according to a survey from HP. These tech snafus have created feelings of “tech shame” among the generation, which sometimes stops them from participating in meetings.

What little training that’s being provided is not being distributed equitably. “There’s a glaring gap in accessibility and application of tech education resources between lower-income and affluent students—a gap that was widened by the pandemic,” Rose Stuckey Kirk, chief corporate social responsibility officer, wrote for Fortune. “And we know this gap is more than an academic or social justice issue.”

It’s evidence of the broader skills gap prevalent in the workforce right now. The problem for Gen Z is that digital communication skills are most high in-demand. But a large portion of them are taking it upon themselves to learn more; 36% plan on acquiring digital skills in order to get a new job or keep their job, Dell finds.

Considering that many companies aren’t equipped with the resources to handle the skills gap, the Gen Zers who do teach themselves digital skills will likely have a leg up in the job search over those who don’t.

----

From personal interaction with young folks (early 20s) in my job it's less about lack of education but simply about "don't care" when it isn't a smartphone with TikTok on it...
 
PL but by the time I got out of school in the mid-2000s, at least in my armpit of Burgerland, "computer classes" were not only just an optional elective, but one hardly pushed in favor of shops or more academically oriented courses (focused history studies, higher mathematics, higher sciences, etc).

Sperging to follow for those who give a shit.

But back in those days, computer courses taught like 1970s and 1980s levels of computer shit; stuff like how they operated (lightly) and how to navigate the operating systems, including the full suite of Microsoft Office programs (as they were called in those days, before the fucking term "app" took over), including not just the obvious Word, Excel and Powerpoint, but dabbling in Publisher and Access as well.

Nowadays, kids don't learn anything about how the computer runs, they just assume it does and cry when it crashes or look at a KB/M combo like it's the devil. But most also don't put in the effort to learn computers, nor do I feel parents try to help them along by pushing computer use when they're in secondary at the very least. Instead of bending to your child's cries for the latest iPhone, get them a fucking cheap PC or laptop and let them learn how to use it.
 
It's really more widespread than this article implies. A lot of people in my previous jobs have no idea there is even such a thing as free software like Libre Office, Krita, VLC, etc. They think they have zero alternatives to Microsoft and Apple. They don't have a resume, they don't know how to drag and drop, and don't know something as basic as identifying what the task bar is.

Part of the reason for computer illiteracy are lazy parents and lazy boomer teachers who don't put in effort. Too often when I was young teachers would show off a program and spend most of the class period just troubleshooting. "Smart" kids in the class would either help them probably because of the sheer agony of having to watch them struggle to use a computer mouse OR have a usb/cd/floppy with video games to load and play since the teacher was distracted. You know who you are.

Evidently, I took a computer literacy course last summer since they also provided free resume assistance, and I was aghast at what they were saying about computers. I'll never forget the instructor pointing at an image of a desktop saying "nobody uses these anymore" then points towards a laptop and says "this is what computers look like now". Even the instructor struggled with basic topics like the Microsoft Office ribbons. Nothing has changed in the past 10-20 years.
 
Last edited:
Sorry that tech skills involve more than dinking around on smartphone apps. It has been assumed that people younger than us are tech savvy but smartphones have put a stop to that. Gen Z struggles with Microsoft Office more than the boomers do.
They stopped teaching kids how to use computers by the mid 2000s. Only a lucky generation or so got any meaningful computer training.
For real? Maybe I taught the youngest in my family a thing or two, but I didn't think it was that bad.
It's really more widespread than this article implies. A lot of people in my previous jobs have no idea there is even such a thing as free software like Libre Office, Krita, VLC, etc. They think they have zero alternatives to Microsoft and Apple. They don't have a resume, they don't know how to drag and drop, and don't know something as basic as identifying what the task bar is.
I fucking love libre office.
 
I didn't like being forced to take 1-unit classes in University for basic Microsoft Office programs, but damn if it's not shit that I use every day.

Still have fucking nightmares that it's my last semester and I am flunking basic Excel or some gay shit and can't graduate.
 
I didn't like being forced to take 1-unit classes in University for basic Microsoft Office programs, but damn if it's not shit that I use every day.

Still have fucking nightmares that it's my last semester and I am flunking basic Excel or some gay shit and can't graduate.
Why is it always school nightmares that are the worst? I don't have job-related nightmares of fucking up or even personal stuff, but school fills me with an existential dread.
 
It's every bit that bad.
Naming a file correctly and saving it in the correct location may as well be rocket science to them...

...my blood pressure is going up just typing this
....But there's this little tab by the file name that says what the file is, and it's open at the place you last saved a file
 
  • Feels
Reactions: FierceBrosnan
PL but by the time I got out of school in the mid-2000s, at least in my armpit of Burgerland, "computer classes" were not only just an optional elective, but one hardly pushed in favor of shops or more academically oriented courses (focused history studies, higher mathematics, higher sciences, etc).

Sperging to follow for those who give a shit.

But back in those days, computer courses taught like 1970s and 1980s levels of computer shit; stuff like how they operated (lightly) and how to navigate the operating systems, including the full suite of Microsoft Office programs (as they were called in those days, before the fucking term "app" took over), including not just the obvious Word, Excel and Powerpoint, but dabbling in Publisher and Access as well.

Nowadays, kids don't learn anything about how the computer runs, they just assume it does and cry when it crashes or look at a KB/M combo like it's the devil. But most also don't put in the effort to learn computers, nor do I feel parents try to help them along by pushing computer use when they're in secondary at the very least. Instead of bending to your child's cries for the latest iPhone, get them a fucking cheap PC or laptop and let them learn how to use it.
It's also because typical PC hardware and software have both become complex as all fuck and at the same time dumbed down at the userspace level, so the learning curve for anything but the most basic tasks has become steeper than what middle and high schools can teach in the limited time they have. Not to mention the pervasive (and at least partially true) boomer view that kids are only interested in computer classes so they can fuck around and play games. Especially kids who grew up doing exactly that on their phones and tablets.

Tech giants have spent years removing customizability, introducing more stylized and complex UI, abstracting all technical details away from the user, and sucking out the fun from all their services and products, and now everyone is shocked that the peak of zoomer tech skill is poking their sausage thumbs at the subscribe button and the bell icon.
 
Still have fucking nightmares that it's my last semester and I am flunking basic Excel or some gay shit and can't graduate.
Excel is fucking over-rated. If you know how to use it on the most basic level (i.e. create tables, format cells, get everything to fit on one page, etc...) then you're fine because most office jobs just use it as an organizer for their inventory shit (physical, digital, human count, etc.). The only time you need to know the ins and outs of it is if you're in some sort of department that deals heavily with numbers (like accounting or payroll) because they use formulas and all that other fancy shit.

It's similar to how questionares/assesments about Microsoft Word when applying for a job force you to learn how to use macros when 90% of companies never use them on Word in the first fucking place. If something is on word, chances are it's getting converted into an un-editable PDF anyway before it gets sent out.
 
....But there's this little tab by the file name that says what the file is, and it's open at the place you last saved a file
I don't know what to tell you... It's very complicated for them.

...and now everyone is shocked that the peak of zoomer tech skill is poking their sausage thumbs at the subscribe button and the bell icon.

But there also seems to be a fundamental lack of curiosity and ability to learn/ discover by just messing around for a bit

Excel is fucking over-rated. If you know how to use it on the most basic level (i.e. create tables, format cells, get everything to fit on one page, etc...) then you're fine because most office jobs just use it as an organizer for their inventory shit (physical, digital, human count, etc.). The only time you need to know the ins and outs of it is if you're in some sort of department that deals heavily with numbers (like accounting or payroll) because they use formulas and all that other fancy shit.

It's similar to how questionares/assesments about Microsoft Word when applying for a job force you to learn how to use macros when 90% of companies never use them on Word in the first fucking place. If something is on word, chances are it's getting converted into an un-editable PDF anyway before it gets sent out.

Well, as you say. There's Excel that is entering numbers into colored spaces with the rest being already in place because it's a template from corporate and there's actual Excel with building formulas and macros and shit.

I know my way around Excel a fair bit but far from everything or being an expert. But luckily I still learnt how to google shit I don't remember how to do or don't know.

That makes me a god of computers to people at work, somehow

I assume this is because iirc zoomers had "influencer" as their most desired "job" or something

This is what you get when you aspire to become a z-lister with no marketable skills living off donations from other people
Which is funny because actual big influencers still spend a lot of time deep diving statistics and analytics to find out what gets their audience's attention and such
 
Back