Home » Technology » Title: Gen Z’s Post-Pandemic Struggles: Are We Failing a Generation?

Title: Gen Z’s Post-Pandemic Struggles: Are We Failing a Generation?

by Rachel Kim – Technology Editor

Colleges Confront ‍Alarming Math Deficiencies Among Incoming Gen Z Students

SAN DIEGO, CA – A‍ new report from the University of California San Diego’s Workgroup on Admissions reveals a dramatic surge in the number of incoming freshmen lacking foundational math skills, sparking concerns​ about‍ academic preparedness and the long-term effects of ⁤disruptions to education. The report, ⁤published in December 2024, found that 900 of the approximately 8,000 first-year students – one in eight -‍ couldn’t meet high-school benchmarks ⁣for ‌math, with one in twelve ⁤unable to ​perform middle-school level calculations.

“The picture is truly troubling,” the ​workgroup ⁢wrote,⁢ stating “the problem ‍is serious and demands an⁣ immediate institutional response.”

The findings coincide with a nationwide trend of colleges maintaining test-optional ⁤or test-free admissions policies, initially ⁢adopted during the COVID-19 pandemic. While Harvard University briefly experimented with‍ test-optional admissions, reinstating the SAT/ACT requirement for the class of 2029 after recognizing the tests’ predictive value, over 2,000 schools remain test-optional or test-free in 2025, including Duke University, Columbia University, and Vanderbilt University.

This shift in admissions criteria has drawn criticism from those who believe⁣ standardized tests provide a crucial metric for assessing academic readiness. The‍ UCSD report ‌suggests a correlation ‌between⁣ the lack of required testing and the observed⁤ deficiencies. A 30-fold increase has been noted in enrolled students who can’t do fundamental high-school ‍math.

The issue extends to elite institutions. Harvard introduced a remedial math class in 2024 for incoming students lacking “foundational skills.” experts suggest the current situation represents a broader societal pattern of accommodating perceived ⁤limitations stemming from the pandemic era, perhaps hindering students’ ability ⁣to overcome academic challenges.

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