Teenagers’ mathematics and reading skills are in an unprecedented decline across dozens of countries and COVID school closures are only partly to be blamed, the OECD said on Tuesday in its latest survey of global learning standards.

  • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I feel like kids (hell, I would also) have been smarter if they used platforms like Reddit/Lemmy etc to learn and discourse constantly. I learn way more in these environments than I ever learned in school. I write (not quite essays but still extended body of writing) just by willingly engaging here. You would have had to pull teeth most of the time to get anything out of me in any comparable sense back then. YMMV

    • rbesfe@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      Part of that may be just that you’re older and more mature now than when you were a high schooler. Encouraging kids to go on Lemmy and Reddit would just lead to most of them screwing around and looking at memes, not learning.

      • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Nah, it was lack of awareness of it (like nobody ever “showed” it to me so I didn’t know to look for it) and lack of a good 3rd party app to make it palatable. Apollo was revolutionary to me when I discovered it in that regard.

    • BraveSirZaphod@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      There’s the underlying basis that, on Reddit etc, you’re generally viewing and discussing topics that you’re already interested in, which is a massive hurdle.

      I’m presuming you haven’t learned much about the Kardashians on Reddit. You could, if you cared about them. I don’t see how it’s meaningfully different for math or anything else.