Test scores across OECD countries peaked around 2012 and have declined since. IQ scores in many developed countries appear to be falling after rising throughout the twentieth century. Nataliya Kosmyna at MIT’s Media Lab began noticing changes around two years ago when strangers started emailing her to ask if using ChatGPT could alter their brains. She posted a study in June tracking brain activity in 54 students writing essays. Those using ChatGPT showed significantly less activity in networks tied to cognitive processing and attention compared to students who wrote without digital help or used only internet search engines. Almost none could recall what they had written immediately after submitting their work. She received more than 4,000 emails afterward. Many came from teachers who reported students producing passable assignments without understanding the material. A British survey found that 92% of university students now use AI and roughly 20% have used it to write all or part of an assignment. Independent research has found that more screen time in schools correlates with worse results. Technology companies have designed products to be frictionless, removing the cognitive challenges brains need to learn. AI now allows users to outsource thinking itself.


I found the old A-Level maths exam paper that I actually did and just couldn’t remember how to do any of it. In my forties I feel like it would be much harder to re-learn how to factor and integrate quadratics, but not impossible, but mostly I don’t feel like the intense pressure of rote learning and exams when I was 18 actually got anything to stick.
So I’m pretty skeptical about any broad declarations about whether education is working or not. Almost all we can do is teach children how to think for themselves, self-teach, and critically evaluate information sources, and then hope for the best.
I hear ya. Math is harder the further my time separates from high school.