Gen-Z Grads:Colleg Was Waste Of Time&$$$ Due To AI inflirating the workspace

Solomon

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Four years of classes, thousands of dollars in tuition and one freshly minted diploma — all to be outdone by a chatbot.

As artificial intelligence floods the workplace, nearly half of Gen Z job seekers say their degrees have already been made obsolete by the rise of generative AI tools like ChatGPT — and they’re wondering why they even bothered hitting the books in the first place.

It’s a waste of time and money, according to respondents to a new Indeed report, which found 49% of Gen Z job hunters think their college education has lost value in the job market thanks to AI.

Only about one-third of millennials feel the same way, and just 1 in 5 boomers have similar regrets, as CIO Dive reports.

The tech tide isn’t turning anytime soon. Businesses are adopting AI faster than you can say “resume rewrite,” and young workers — especially fresh-out-of-college grads — are feeling the squeeze most.

Indeed’s new report, conducted by Harris Poll and based on responses from 772 U.S. workers and job seekers with at least an associate’s degree, reveals a generational divide in career confidence.

Younger applicants are far more likely than their older counterparts to feel that AI has rendered their skills — and schooling — useless.

Even worse, college degrees are rapidly losing priority in job listings. With companies increasingly dropping the four-year requirement, half of Gen Z now say college was a poor investment altogether.

“Every job currently posted on Indeed’s job board will likely experience some level of exposure to generative AI and the changes it represents,” Indeed Senior Talent Strategy Advisor Linsey Fagan warned readers in an email to CIO Dive.

And employers aren’t just looking for folks with fancy paper — they’re looking for people who know how to work with the machines.

“For any organization to succeed with AI, every single employee needs to have a basic understanding of AI and how their company uses it,” said Fagan. “Leaders play a crucial role in this shift by assessing their teams, listening to individual needs, and supporting their development.”

The pressure to adapt is real. From entry-level roles to the C-suite, AI is transforming not just how people work — but what they work on, how they’re paid, and even who gets hired.

Some employers are responding by offering upskilling programs, while tech vendors like Microsoft and Google are rolling out public training tools to get workers AI-ready — and help them stay that way.

Online education platform O’Reilly reported a huge surge in demand for AI learning tools last year, with four times as many professionals enrolling in courses on machine learning, prompt engineering and other once-niche skills.

“To truly unlock the potential of AI, organizations must invest in their people, offering training, hands-on experiences and opportunities to explore new tools in a supportive environment,” said Fagan.

“Organizations need employees to be motivated to try these tools and want to apply them in their day-to-day.”

This means it’s best to learn the tech, or get left behind.

For Gen Z grads facing a mountain of student debt and a job market where college degrees are being outpaced by coding bootcamps and chatbot know-how, it’s a bitter pill to swallow.

The new diploma, it seems, is digital — and spelled A-I.

Source: New York Post
 

If you currently have too many women chasing you, calling you, harassing you, knocking on your door at 2 o'clock in the morning... then I have the simple solution for you.

Just read my free ebook 22 Rules for Massive Success With Women and do the opposite of what I recommend.

This will quickly drive all women away from you.

And you will be able to relax and to live your life in peace and quiet.

BackInTheGame78

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Four years of classes, thousands of dollars in tuition and one freshly minted diploma — all to be outdone by a chatbot.

As artificial intelligence floods the workplace, nearly half of Gen Z job seekers say their degrees have already been made obsolete by the rise of generative AI tools like ChatGPT — and they’re wondering why they even bothered hitting the books in the first place.

It’s a waste of time and money, according to respondents to a new Indeed report, which found 49% of Gen Z job hunters think their college education has lost value in the job market thanks to AI.

Only about one-third of millennials feel the same way, and just 1 in 5 boomers have similar regrets, as CIO Dive reports.

The tech tide isn’t turning anytime soon. Businesses are adopting AI faster than you can say “resume rewrite,” and young workers — especially fresh-out-of-college grads — are feeling the squeeze most.

Indeed’s new report, conducted by Harris Poll and based on responses from 772 U.S. workers and job seekers with at least an associate’s degree, reveals a generational divide in career confidence.

Younger applicants are far more likely than their older counterparts to feel that AI has rendered their skills — and schooling — useless.

Even worse, college degrees are rapidly losing priority in job listings. With companies increasingly dropping the four-year requirement, half of Gen Z now say college was a poor investment altogether.

“Every job currently posted on Indeed’s job board will likely experience some level of exposure to generative AI and the changes it represents,” Indeed Senior Talent Strategy Advisor Linsey Fagan warned readers in an email to CIO Dive.

And employers aren’t just looking for folks with fancy paper — they’re looking for people who know how to work with the machines.

“For any organization to succeed with AI, every single employee needs to have a basic understanding of AI and how their company uses it,” said Fagan. “Leaders play a crucial role in this shift by assessing their teams, listening to individual needs, and supporting their development.”

The pressure to adapt is real. From entry-level roles to the C-suite, AI is transforming not just how people work — but what they work on, how they’re paid, and even who gets hired.

Some employers are responding by offering upskilling programs, while tech vendors like Microsoft and Google are rolling out public training tools to get workers AI-ready — and help them stay that way.

Online education platform O’Reilly reported a huge surge in demand for AI learning tools last year, with four times as many professionals enrolling in courses on machine learning, prompt engineering and other once-niche skills.

“To truly unlock the potential of AI, organizations must invest in their people, offering training, hands-on experiences and opportunities to explore new tools in a supportive environment,” said Fagan.

“Organizations need employees to be motivated to try these tools and want to apply them in their day-to-day.”

This means it’s best to learn the tech, or get left behind.

For Gen Z grads facing a mountain of student debt and a job market where college degrees are being outpaced by coding bootcamps and chatbot know-how, it’s a bitter pill to swallow.

The new diploma, it seems, is digital — and spelled A-I.

Source: New York Post
Not exactly.

For it to be useful you still need to have a pretty good idea of what you are trying to do and the ability to have knowledge in that subject matter to spot errors because it always has some.

Also if you don't know anything in that field, you would be clueless to whether it was actually correct or not..many times it isn't.

As a senior software engineer that uses AI daily, the hype about AI is about 1000x more than it's actual usefulness in the vast majority of fields unless it's basic stuff like writing documentation, translating etc.
 

Solomon

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Not exactly.

For it to be useful you still need to have a pretty good idea of what you are trying to do and the ability to have knowledge in that subject matter to spot errors because it always has some.

Also if you don't know anything in that field, you would be clueless to whether it was actually correct or not..many times it isn't.

As a senior software engineer that uses AI daily, the hype about AI is about 1000x more than it's actual usefulness in the vast majority of fields unless it's basic stuff like writing documentation, translating etc.
I'm curious I personally agree with you that AI isn't there yet, but I do think AI will shift the job market dramatically within 10-20 years. I mean they are predicting AI will affect 300 million jobs by 2030. That may not seem like a lot when you have 8 billion people on earth but it's deftinely disruptive and I belive it will continue to be so

IMO men need to jump on this and figure out how they can be ahead of this trend. For example I got a buddy who has been working on a niche AI trading app. Tons of them out there but when I hear people making 50K a week using fake AI pictures(men pretending to be women) on Onlyfans there is deftinely a market out there to make some $$$
 

BackInTheGame78

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I'm curious I personally agree with you that AI isn't there yet, but I do think AI will shift the job market dramatically within 10-20 years. I mean they are predicting AI will affect 300 million jobs by 2030. That may not seem like a lot when you have 8 billion people on earth but it's deftinely disruptive and I belive it will continue to be so

IMO men need to jump on this and figure out how they can be ahead of this trend. For example I got a buddy who has been working on a niche AI trading app. Tons of them out there but when I hear people making 50K a week using fake AI pictures(men pretending to be women) on Onlyfans there is deftinely a market out there to make some $$$
Well the thing is, they will quickly find out that having AI do everything without humans doing anything might seem like a great idea, but how great will it be when unemployment is 25%, violent crime is at the highest levels in centuries because the only way for people to survive is to steal from others and take what they have and nobody can afford to buy anything these companies are selling?
 

Solomon

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Well the thing is, they will quickly find out that having AI do everything without humans doing anything might seem like a great idea, but how great will it be when unemployment is 25%, violent crime is at the highest levels in centuries because the only way for people to survive is to steal from others and take what they have and nobody can afford to buy anything these companies are selling?
Personally, I think humans will figure it out. You have to remember that at one point, People thought that the telephone would kill Opera concerts. Some experts thought that email/Internet would kill the postal companies. Opera houses still exist and the postal company as well, obviously.

I see something happening similarly like in the 2010s when the gig economy started to explode due to companies like Uber and Airbnb. I think AI will also create new jobs for people in industries that we haven't thought of yet. An "AIgig" economy, what it looks I do not know but I have some random ideas.

Do I think Universal basic income (UBI) will be a thing 20 years from now? sure. I do think the middle class will continue to disappear and the wealth gap is going to be insane.
 

If you currently have too many women chasing you, calling you, harassing you, knocking on your door at 2 o'clock in the morning... then I have the simple solution for you.

Just read my free ebook 22 Rules for Massive Success With Women and do the opposite of what I recommend.

This will quickly drive all women away from you.

And you will be able to relax and to live your life in peace and quiet.

BaronOfHair

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Four years of classes, thousands of dollars in tuition and one freshly minted diploma — all to be outdone by a chatbot.

As artificial intelligence floods the workplace, nearly half of Gen Z job seekers say their degrees have already been made obsolete by the rise of generative AI tools like ChatGPT — and they’re wondering why they even bothered hitting the books in the first place.

It’s a waste of time and money, according to respondents to a new Indeed report, which found 49% of Gen Z job hunters think their college education has lost value in the job market thanks to AI.

Only about one-third of millennials feel the same way, and just 1 in 5 boomers have similar regrets, as CIO Dive reports.

The tech tide isn’t turning anytime soon. Businesses are adopting AI faster than you can say “resume rewrite,” and young workers — especially fresh-out-of-college grads — are feeling the squeeze most.

Indeed’s new report, conducted by Harris Poll and based on responses from 772 U.S. workers and job seekers with at least an associate’s degree, reveals a generational divide in career confidence.

Younger applicants are far more likely than their older counterparts to feel that AI has rendered their skills — and schooling — useless.

Even worse, college degrees are rapidly losing priority in job listings. With companies increasingly dropping the four-year requirement, half of Gen Z now say college was a poor investment altogether.

“Every job currently posted on Indeed’s job board will likely experience some level of exposure to generative AI and the changes it represents,” Indeed Senior Talent Strategy Advisor Linsey Fagan warned readers in an email to CIO Dive.

And employers aren’t just looking for folks with fancy paper — they’re looking for people who know how to work with the machines.

“For any organization to succeed with AI, every single employee needs to have a basic understanding of AI and how their company uses it,” said Fagan. “Leaders play a crucial role in this shift by assessing their teams, listening to individual needs, and supporting their development.”

The pressure to adapt is real. From entry-level roles to the C-suite, AI is transforming not just how people work — but what they work on, how they’re paid, and even who gets hired.

Some employers are responding by offering upskilling programs, while tech vendors like Microsoft and Google are rolling out public training tools to get workers AI-ready — and help them stay that way.

Online education platform O’Reilly reported a huge surge in demand for AI learning tools last year, with four times as many professionals enrolling in courses on machine learning, prompt engineering and other once-niche skills.

“To truly unlock the potential of AI, organizations must invest in their people, offering training, hands-on experiences and opportunities to explore new tools in a supportive environment,” said Fagan.

“Organizations need employees to be motivated to try these tools and want to apply them in their day-to-day.”

This means it’s best to learn the tech, or get left behind.

For Gen Z grads facing a mountain of student debt and a job market where college degrees are being outpaced by coding bootcamps and chatbot know-how, it’s a bitter pill to swallow.

The new diploma, it seems, is digital — and spelled A-I.

Source: New York Post
And the world's smallest violin is eking out yet another tune
 

plumber

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biology and evolution will not be able to keep up with the knowledge increase speed. already that was the case, now with ai the speed of increase is going to multiply by insane amounts. one month will be like 10 years or 100 years in the past, and continue to get faster and faster until infinity.

provider game will be dead. only looks and hormonal drive will separate us from each other. and that will only be for a short time as the knowledge growth will adjust those in the not very far future. all men will be tall, look like each other and have the optimum looks. all men will have similar and proper hormone drivers. knowledge will not matter, ability will not matter.

 

sevbucmash

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Inflation and stuff, not only Ai and technology. A house cost almost a million.

There needs to be a war, without war things bound to get worst, economically. Big war. For example war with China over Taiwan, or war with Russia, or war with North Korea.
 

Gamisch

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The west specialised in being the middleman.

We grew up believing we are successful when we sit at a desk behind a fancy laptop wearing skinny jeans and a fancy shirt surrounded by (hot) women. We looked down on jobs that require manual labor.

Basically the West been feminised for many decades and AI exposed it . There will always be need for specialised experts, but that's the catch: not everyone is going to be a expert.

And yes, this topic is related to the dynamics between men and women and relationships in general. We in the west been profitable because the rest of world was suffering. That balance is about to be "corrected " ,meaning WE will have less while the rest of the world will have a bit more...also take into consideration that the human population keeps expanding. Nigeria went from 70 mil to 200 million in 30 years...Egypt has a similar situation. All those men and women have their own " dirty dreams" and wanna become something..
 

BaronOfHair

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There needs to be a war, without war things bound to get worst, economically
Two years after Tyler Durden lamented the absence of a major war in Fight Club, we embarked on not one but TWO military adventures(Afghanistan and Iraq)which dragged on for over two decades, and ended less than gloriously. That sh-t did nothing to deter the economic meltdown of the late 2000s, the effects of which still reverberate today

Much as we all enjoy rewatching Predator and The Dirty Dozen from time to time, let's not go overboard with this longing for overseas fisticuffs
 

Just because a woman listens to you and acts interested in what you say doesn't mean she really is. She might just be acting polite, while silently wishing that the date would hurry up and end, or that you would go away... and never come back.

Quote taken from The SoSuave Guide to Women and Dating, which you can read for FREE.

Gamisch

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Two years after Tyler Durden lamented the absence of a major war in Fight Club, we embarked on not one but TWO military adventures(Afghanistan and Iraq)which dragged on for over two decades, and ended less than gloriously. That sh-t did nothing to deter the economic meltdown of the late 2000s, the effects of which still reverberate today

Much as we all enjoy rewatching Predator and The Dirty Dozen from time to time, let's not go overboard with this longing for overseas fisticuffs
I geuss the narrative is that a " war" is necessary to "factory reset" certain dynamics. To put it bluntly: to get women back into primitive survival mode again and take away their ability to nitpick their ideal man in a feminine shaped society.

This narrative been fed by eastern European countries, where they have the most beautiful women in the world while their beauty is basically worthless without the presence of a (strong) man. Same could be said for many Arabic ,Asian and Latin American and African countries . That's basically the entire world EXCEPT the west.

So now we have men looking desperately for all kinds of crazy solutions to solve thse gender issues. They believe a war will take us back just one or two steps like that software update you didn't like. Somehow men believe that the 1950s were the peak of western civilisation.

But none of them wants to stand on the frontline!!
 
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