Author Topic: Gen Z: The first generation not smarter than their parents  (Read 131 times)

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Gen Z: The first generation not smarter than their parents

For more than a century, each generation reliably tested smarter than the one before it. No longer.

Monty L. Donohew | June 22, 2026

For more than a century, each generation reliably tested smarter than the one before it.  This was the Flynn Effect — the steady rise in I.Q. scores of roughly three points per decade, driven by better nutrition, education, and public health, and a more complex environment.

That long upward march appears to have ended with Gen Z.  We are now witnessing the first modern generation that is not outperforming its parents on key measures of cognitive ability.

Large-scale international assessments tell the story.  PISA, TIMSS, and other standardized tests show clear declines or stalls in literacy, numeracy, problem-solving, and executive function among Gen Z cohorts (born roughly 1997–2012) compared to Millennials.

Neuroscientist Dr. Jared Cooney Horvath, testifying before Congress, highlighted data showing measurable drops in attention span, working memory, and deep reasoning skills that began accelerating around 2010–2015, the exact period when smartphones and constant screen exposure became ubiquitous in schools and homes.

This a historic break in the pattern that defined modern progress.  Previous generations stood on the shoulders of those who came before them.  Gen Z is the first in a long time to step backward.

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https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2026/06/gen_z_the_first_generation_not_smarter_than_their_parents.html
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Online mountaineer

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If only they had less screen time and more time with books.
[H]umanity repeats the worst mistakes of previous generations and ... every free, prosperous civilization will eventually be destroyed by that small fraction of its people who find no satisfaction in anything but anger.
-- Dean Koontz, "The Friend of the Family"

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Their parents weren't all that sharp either.
You don’t become cooler with age but you do care progressively less about being cool, which is the only true way to actually be cool.

Offline libertybele

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If only they had less screen time and more time with books.

Agree. It still saddens me that kids are not being taught cursive and instead of teaching kids how to do math problems they are allowed to use calculators.   Kids are not being taught even the basics. 

Live in  harmony with one another; do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly, do not claim to be wiser than you are.  Do not repay anyone evil for evil, but take thought for what is noble in the sight of all.  If it is possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all.

Romans 12:16-18

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They're not reading. How will they learn if they don't read? I'm trying to track down the source of something I read just the other day about how even at the vaunted Harvard, college students are not required to read entire works now, just excerpts. It's basically a Cliff Notes education, except even less in-depth than that.

K-12 children are not reading, either. This AP news article from last month describes a "reading recession" and low test scores. Here's a related article: Your Kids Aren't Learning: Reading Is No Longer Required in School.

I go to the public library two or three times a week, and it does my little heart good to see parents there with their children, checking out a stack of books. It's all too rare, however.
[H]umanity repeats the worst mistakes of previous generations and ... every free, prosperous civilization will eventually be destroyed by that small fraction of its people who find no satisfaction in anything but anger.
-- Dean Koontz, "The Friend of the Family"

Online mountaineer

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This essay lists over 400 books in the western canon, separated by age group. It's meant for all of you who want the best for your child's education and for your own as well: https://educatedandfree.substack.com/p/a-library-to-build-great-americans?r=b8lae
[H]umanity repeats the worst mistakes of previous generations and ... every free, prosperous civilization will eventually be destroyed by that small fraction of its people who find no satisfaction in anything but anger.
-- Dean Koontz, "The Friend of the Family"

Online Bigun

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They're not reading. How will they learn if they don't read? I'm trying to track down the source of something I read just the other day about how even at the vaunted Harvard, college students are not required to read entire works now, just excerpts. It's basically a Cliff Notes education, except even less in-depth than that.

K-12 children are not reading, either. This AP news article from last month describes a "reading recession" and low test scores. Here's a related article: Your Kids Aren't Learning: Reading Is No Longer Required in School.

I go to the public library two or three times a week, and it does my little heart good to see parents there with their children, checking out a stack of books. It's all too rare, however.

John Dewey and his minions have done their work well unfortunately.
Scientists, like all discoverers of truth, have always asked, "What?” “How?” “Why?” “What if?” and “Why not?” Questioning science is science.

Jaeger, John . Brilliant Creations : The Wonder of Nature and Life (p. 5). Kindle Edition.

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The real problem is that they think they are smarter, but don't realize just how much they don't know.
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I go to the public library two or three times a week, and it does my little heart good to see parents there with their children, checking out a stack of books. It's all too rare, however.

If you'll allow me a brief grandmother moment, please. I'm so very proud of my granddaughter. She is in the 1st grade, and she is reading at the 4th grade level per her latest test scores. Reading is one of her favorite things to do, and it shows. Granddaughter #2 is following right along behind her ... she is only 18 months old but regularly brings me books and asks me to read them to her. Full credit and props to my daughter-in-law and son for fostering that into their children. I'm super proud of both of them, too.