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posted by janrinok on Friday April 28, @01:52PM   Printer-friendly

https://www.theverge.com/22684730/students-file-folder-directory-structure-education-gen-z

A generation that grew up with Google is forcing professors to rethink their lesson plans

Catherine Garland, an astrophysicist, started seeing the problem in 2017. She was teaching an engineering course, and her students were using simulation software to model turbines for jet engines. She'd laid out the assignment clearly, but student after student was calling her over for help. They were all getting the same error message: The program couldn't find their files.

Garland thought it would be an easy fix. She asked each student where they'd saved their project. Could they be on the desktop? Perhaps in the shared drive? But over and over, she was met with confusion. "What are you talking about?" multiple students inquired. Not only did they not know where their files were saved — they didn't understand the question.

Gradually, Garland came to the same realization that many of her fellow educators have reached in the past four years: the concept of file folders and directories, essential to previous generations' understanding of computers, is gibberish to many modern students.

Professors have varied recollections of when they first saw the disconnect. But their estimates (even the most tentative ones) are surprisingly similar. It's been an issue for four years or so, starting — for many educators — around the fall of 2017.

That's approximately when Lincoln Colling, a lecturer in the psychology department at the University of Sussex, told a class full of research students to pull a file out of a specific directory and was met with blank stares. It was the same semester that Nicolás Guarín-Zapata, an applied physicist and lecturer at Colombia's Universidad EAFIT, noticed that students in his classes were having trouble finding their documents. It's the same year that posts began to pop up on STEM-educator forums asking for help explaining the concept of a file.

While some of us may find this phenomenon strange to understand it is becoming increasingly real for many. Are there any other examples of things that we take for granted becoming incomprehensible to those younger that ourselves? I'm not thinking of 'hanging up' the telephone, or why the icon for saving a file appears to some young people to be a vending machine, but things that cause difficulty for others.


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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by owl on Friday April 28, @08:57PM

    by owl (15206) Subscriber Badge on Friday April 28, @08:57PM (#1303765)

    In a related issue, years ago file browsers began, by default, hiding the suffix of a filename.

    Actually, it was: "some windows revisions ago, Microsoft made the decision to, by default, hide the file extensions in their default file explorer on windows".

    One of the stupidest choices MS ever made, and they have made many. Because not only does it lead to users not knowing what type of file they are looking at, but it also lead to the numerous exploits of users receiving "spending-report.xls.exe" via email, seeing "spending-report.xls" in their file browser, and opening it thinking it was a spreadsheet -- and getting owned in the process.

    For those of use forced to use windows with $job, at least MS still provides the UI toggle to undo that awful miss-feature and turn file extension display back on.

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