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?

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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.

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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...
 
The people around me speak in hushed tones of me being a whiz. Which is ridiculous. But the older ones actually are boomers (genuinely and not perjoratively) and the younger ones can’t use a filing system or spell or use grammar. They literally can’t file. Several of them have told me they don’t read and are proud of that
How do you fuck up the alphabet?

i miss flash games
 
I have always tried to be a teacher in my job, mostly because I appreciate the people who took time to teach me things. That being said, it feels like there has been a big change to newbies in the last 5 years. They never ask questions when you give them answers and they never seem to retain anything you say or write to them. They also don’t seem to understand that I am mocking them when they ask me the same thing over and over again and I just forward the last email I sent them. I then forward the forward when they ask again. I really don’t want to be that old angry person that just hates newbies but it is getting really hard.

Instead they can't figure out a basic file system.
they don't know how to drag and drop, and don't know something as basic as identifying what the task bar is.
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...

About a year ago there was an issue viewing uploaded documents in a specialized software we license. They were testing a new version and while it worked in our current version, they couldn’t view the documents in this new version. For both versions of the software, the file path used to store the document includes the file number. Remember that. So when it didn’t work, a ticket was opened with our Support department. It went from Tier 1 to Tier 2 to Tier 3 to our Systems group. Systems kicked it back saying that it must be an issue with the software and to contact their support department. So a ticket was opened there and I am assuming it went through the same escalation process. I know it made it to a programmer who said it wasn’t their issue and kicked it back to my company. Eventually it was brought up in a meeting to discuss older open tickets. I was on that meeting for a different issue but pointed out that the file number they created contained an asterisk symbol, which is an invalid character type for Windows. I guess they created a new file without an asterisk and it worked fine. I was blown away that no one else had seen this AND that they had only created one file to test this on before reporting that “it no work.”
 
About a year ago there was an issue viewing uploaded documents in a specialized software we license. They were testing a new version and while it worked in our current version, they couldn’t view the documents in this new version. For both versions of the software, the file path used to store the document includes the file number. Remember that. So when it didn’t work, a ticket was opened with our Support department. It went from Tier 1 to Tier 2 to Tier 3 to our Systems group. Systems kicked it back saying that it must be an issue with the software and to contact their support department. So a ticket was opened there and I am assuming it went through the same escalation process. I know it made it to a programmer who said it wasn’t their issue and kicked it back to my company. Eventually it was brought up in a meeting to discuss older open tickets. I was on that meeting for a different issue but pointed out that the file number they created contained an asterisk symbol, which is an invalid character type for Windows. I guess they created a new file without an asterisk and it worked fine. I was blown away that no one else had seen this AND that they had only created one file to test this on before reporting that “it no work.”
how the fuck does this basic shit happen
 
Ah yes, a topic myself and Mr. Weed Eater are more than familiar with.

So, back in the early and mid 2000s, public schools nationwide started to roll out their computer lab programs. The entire point was to get working PCs, whether they were Windows native PCs, or MAC OSX native, into these thousands of schools so that the very Gen Z demographic we're talking about here, could finally be tech literate like what the generations before us expected out of us.

But here's the thing. I came from a tech-friendly family, and so did Mr. Weed Eater. I personally learned how to spell my first name through Windows and a keyboard, not by traditional pen and paper. We both had computers in our homes, even if they were shitty piece of shit computers, we still had them. By the time I got into middle school in the 2010s, I would argue at least 60% or more of my school already had a smartphone in their pockets. I swear to Christ, talking to my peers drove me bat-shit crazy, because all the faggots around me couldn't possibly understand how I didn't have a smartphone. I was the "faggot" for being perfectly fine having a piece of shit laptop, because even at that time, it wasn't a "gAyMeR Pee-Cee". These were the same retards who typed a letter every two seconds, because they didn't give a shit about "computer lab" back in elementary school, and thought typing exercises were beneath them. These are the same retards who thought entry-level computer science classes in Freshman year were beneath them, and most likely only did those classes purely because it was an elective course out of a small few that they were even able to get into due to it's availability compared to the other popular classes.

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.
You see this shit? This is fucking bullshit. I AM of this generation, and I am telling you now that all the idiots who are saying their school education "didn't prepare them" are liars who didn't even give a SINGLE SHIT about computer literacy when they did have the chance to learn. The 56% complaining that they have little to no computer skills, are also liars and dramatic pussies. Excel isn't hard. Word isn't hard. Powerpoint is one of the easiest programs ever conceived.

Also remember too, this is the same generation that lessened their reading and comprehension skills BECAUSE of the new tech. I personally didn't, I got in trouble for "hoarding" all the new books my elementary teachers would put in their classroom library (even though I knew for a fact I would actually read these fucking books unlike the literal retards who would take the books and shove them into their desk somewhere, never to read them or care about the book ever), but this is part of my point. Smartphones gave my generation an inch, and they took a mile, becoming more retarded than ever. Yet somehow now this is "society's" fault for not preparing these retards?

Again, WE GAVE YOU THE ABILITY TO LEARN. You reap what you've sown. This isn't anybody else's fault but YOUR OWN if you don't have a WPM of at least near 40, which isn't even hard to achieve (mine is 72/WPM lul).
 
sorry we were never properly taught how to use tech by confused boomers or jobless millenials
It's easy as hell, most millennials figured it out on their own as a kid just by fucking around with the settings. Now go do the latest retarded TikTok dance and ponder chopping your genitals off and giving up that bussy ya useless spoonfed gender confused autistic little catboy fag
 
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Some woke chick I know went on a rant about her 17 year old son wanting to play video games all day instead of finding a job. She blamed him not being engaged by the woke bullshit they push in school these days. I told her I agree that government indoctrination camps are the problem and we should abolish the department of education. She really didn't like that lol
 
Some woke chick I know went on a rant about her 17 year old son wanting to play video games all day instead of finding a job. She blamed him not being engaged by the woke bullshit they push in school these days. I told her I agree that government indoctrination camps are the problem and we should abolish the department of education. She really didn't like that lol
kek
she's the reason why he doesn't want a job
 
>be zoomer
>be terminally online since parents posted ultrasound photos on facebook
>given smartphone for 1st birthday present
>grow up surrounded by computers
>doesn't know what a file manager is
>never even opened notepad
>doesn't know the difference between c++ and html
>can't even write basic hello world program
>applies for tech jobs thinking work consists of posting tiktok videos
>fired first day for not understanding what a script is
>post on tiktok about how everyone else failed to teach me skills I should have learned
 
Tech skills are definitely important but considering 80% of these children are going to grow up to be janitors maybe we should focus on more practical issues. I'm thinking maybe a solid year on different ways to tie up a trash bag and if they can get above a C then computer courses will be offered later.
 
I think there was a real explosion of exploration and fun when computers came out to the general public
This is how I remember it being in the mid-1990s: REALLY fun. And I wasn’t a math or science nerd; I just really wanted to explore all the cool shit I could do with this stuff. I still vividly remember my friend showing me how to view the HTML on a given website so that I could learn how to write my own. (This was back before everything was hidden in CSS etc.)

A sense of wonder and awe can take a person very far. It’s a shame that those born post-iPhone don’t seem able to cultivate that.
 
This was more or less predicted to eventually happen, you could see it starting back in the early 2000s, particuarly with Apple computers becoming more popular. UIs began to hide more and more of the nuts-and-bolts working behind the scenes, leaving kids with very little understanding of what it was they were actually doing or how it worked. Throw in smart-phones, and that trend was more or less cemented.

I know a lot of younger Millenials who struggle in the same way, so I wouldn't necessarily put it down to just the Zoomers.
 
I have always tried to be a teacher in my job, mostly because I appreciate the people who took time to teach me things. That being said, it feels like there has been a big change to newbies in the last 5 years. They never ask questions when you give them answers and they never seem to retain anything you say or write to them. They also don’t seem to understand that I am mocking them when they ask me the same thing over and over again and I just forward the last email I sent them. I then forward the forward when they ask again. I really don’t want to be that old angry person that just hates newbies but it is getting really hard.


Knowledge and information used to be kept secret and hoarded, even the ability to read. Depending on your age someone having taken the time to teach you something you aren't going to learn elsewhere was a significant moment in your life, and possibly even life-altering.

Today there is an endless abundance of readily accessible knowledge, so it's considered useless and/or pointless. Celebrity opinions are of a far greater value.
 
This lack of ability to do anything but interact with apps highlights something that’s been nagging at me- as time goes on the west is degenerating into a cargo cult that doesn’t understand how anything works.

The zoomers inability to locate their Downloads folder is a manifestation of this, but it’s a continuation of multi-generational trends.

We might end up as zoo residents making sacrificial offerings to chatbots.
 
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.
If only you knew how much of the engineering work at Boeing is done with excel :lit:
 
how the fuck does this basic shit happen
90% of the worst "technical" problems are "basic shit."
One part of the problem is bureaucratic in nature. "I'm a low level grunt. It's not my job to fix shit; I do what I'm told." Followed by chain of command leading up to "The problem you're experiencing is not in my job description" so stupid bullshit gets passed around until someone with enough tenacity to break script and use their fucking brain finally speaks up and tells them they're all retards.
Another big part of it is that troubleshooting is more of a mindset than a skill. Very intelligent people who would know the problem is a problem if it were pointed out focus their attention elsewhere. They're looking for something profound and technical when the problem is more often something as trivial as "you named your file wrong."
 
Quit whining. Gen X sucked at tech coming out of schools, too. A class of 2000 college graduate with his stupid MCSE and A+ certification was functionally worthless. The only difference is those trend-chasing knuckleheads still had entry level jobs available they could take, and learn some skills the hard way.

And don't get me started on the iPad-trained, "my Magnet school had a robotics class" tryhard millenials. We still haven't found a use for 95% of them.

School training will always lag behind in teaching useful tech skills, period. Stop copy/pasting this article every 5 years.
 
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