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There is a fall in attention and quality of education which I see everywhere (I can speak for Belgium, Poland and Spain). The education system has evolved much more to "if you try, it will be ok". That is fine for kindergarten, but not so much at a university. But we see that people now are used to passing like that: they attended classes, tried the homework, ok so they failed the exam but why can't they pass? (my girlfriend recently had 2 students that argued like that, in addition they claim they don't need Java programming.... they were studying computer sciences ) It is quite frustrating.
At universities, we see that the students now are actually learning less detail and less skills in independent working than we did in our days. The system is much more guiding them, but in my opinion - and that of some colleagues - too much.
But I wonder: in our time, it seems we had more a sense of pride or feeling of accomplishment. Passing a test meant something. And at least we seemed to acknowledge that not passing an exam is not passing the course. Now it seems they just want the grade, and the don't mind getting it without effort (even if this undermines the value of the grade). So maybe they don't take the IQ test seriously? I read somewhere that "young people know have other skills that are not reflected in the old IQ tests", but I do not agree with that. While it is possible they have other skills, some basic skills should not suffer from that.