Generation Z now officially dumber than their parents due to Smart Screen adoption.
Scientists have identified a reversal of the
long-standing Flynn effect—the roughly 200-year
trend of rising average intelligence
(measured via IQ and cognitive tests)
across generations.
For the first time in modern recorded history,
For the first time in modern recorded history,
Generation Z (born roughly 1997–2012) shows
lower performance than previous generations
in key cognitive domains, including attention,
memory, literacy, numeracy, executive function,
problem-solving, and general IQ—despite
spending more years in formal education than
ever before.
Neuroscientist and educator
Neuroscientist and educator
Dr. Jared Cooney Horvath, PhD, MEd, testified
before the U.S. Senate Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation on January 15, 2026, highlighting this shift. In his written testimony, he stated that cognitive development in
children across much of the developed
world has stalled or reversed over the
past two decades, with declines evident in
international assessments (e.g., PISA, TIMSS)
and other large-scale data starting
around the mid-2000s and accelerating
post-2010.
Horvath attributes the primary driver not to
Horvath attributes the primary driver not to
reduced schooling, but to the widespread
integration of digital screens and educational
technology (EdTech) in classrooms. He argues
that human brains evolved for deep, focused
learning through face-to-face interaction and
sustained attention, not fragmented skimming
or constant task-switching encouraged by
devices.
Key points from his testimony include:
- Teens now spend over half their waking hours
Key points from his testimony include:
- Teens now spend over half their waking hours
on screens, with significant portions in school
involving computers or tablets—often leading
to off-task behavior and shallower processing.
- Evidence from meta-analyses and
- Evidence from meta-analyses and
national/international studies shows a
consistent pattern: higher classroom screen
exposure correlates with weaker outcomes in
reading, math, science, and higher-order
reasoning.
- Digital tools may aid narrow, repetitive skill
- Digital tools may aid narrow, repetitive skill
practice in controlled settings, but in core
academic contexts, they tend to reduce depth of
understanding, retention, and critical thinking.
Horvath describes this as a "structural mismatch"
Horvath describes this as a "structural mismatch"
between human cognition and how digital
platforms are designed (to capture and fragment
attention), warning that unchecked EdTech
adoption risks long-term harm to
workforce skills, innovation, and societal
reasoning.
[Horvath, J. C. (2026). Written testimony
[Horvath, J. C. (2026). Written testimony
before the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce,
Science, and Transportation. U.S. Senate]

I get the feeling none of this is by accident. When the ironically named smartphones became ubiquitous, I found that not only were my high school students distracted more than ever, but even some of my adult students could not get enough of it. It fractures thoughts, working as designed.
ReplyDeleteSupposedly, the schools for the elite do not use the devices, focusing instead on the traditional deeper learning as noted in the report you cited. Thanks
I very much agree with you. It is a continued attack on manKIND by a nonhuman intelligence. Thanks for your comment. Best regards, db
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