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Study: Nearly half of millennials struggle with news literacy and critical thinking

study-nearly-half-of-millennials-struggle-with-news-literacy-and-critical-thinking

The ability to identify fake news and other false information has never been more important. That makes critical thinking skills a must – yet according to new national study from edtech firm MindEdge Learning, millennials struggle in this area. The survey provides a sobering look at the extent to which millennials need to sharpen their critical thinking skills. It also shows that a large majority of these young people understand the importance of critical thinking in the knowledge-based economy — an understanding that may drive more of them to improve these skills in the future.

The study, commissioned by MindEdge and conducted by Research Now, probed the attitudes of 1 000 millennials who are currently in college or are recent graduates. The goal of the research was to evaluate this group's critical thinking skills and determine whether they're able to separate fake news from factual information. The results were not promising: 44% of respondents received a relative 'F' when it comes to these skills.

Given the fact that 55% of millennials receive news through social media and 51% share news through social media, the ability to accurately filter facts is a necessity. Yet, according to the research, only 36% of those surveyed feel they are very well-trained in this area. The reach and impact of this issue is made clear by the fact that 37% of respondents admitted to sharing inaccurate information on social media.

"These findings have significant ramifications, not only for the current fake news epidemic we're facing, but also for millennials' long-term success," said Frank Connolly, a senior editor at MindEdge who oversaw the research. "By 2020, the World Economic Forum anticipates critical thinking will be the second most important skill to exhibit, second only to complex problem solving. Our research finds that the current state of critical thinking among millennials – the largest and most connected generation yet – is lacking in a big way, and now is the time to address the issue."

Here are some key takeaways from the study:

Millennials struggle to identify false content online 

As part of the study, respondents took a basic, nine-question critical thinking test. The results found that many millennials are deficient in this area, with only 24% able to correctly answer eight to nine questions designed to gauge respondents' ability to detect false or misleading content. This poor performance is not surprising given the fact that only about one-third of respondents (36%) feel confident they are very well-trained in this area. Those who took the survey reported that their peers are even less versed in this area, with only 20% of respondents describing their colleagues as very well-trained in critical thinking skills.

Millennials don't feel their college education provided them with the skills they need to compete in the job market

While three out of five respondents (61%) report having studied critical thinking in college, another 13% were unsure if they had received any formal training in this area. Regardless of any relevant course work, only about one in three are very confident in their ability to identify false information. Almost half (46%) claim that critical thinking skills in assessing the accuracy and reliability of websites and online content are very important, while two-thirds (64%) say that critical thinking skills will be or are very important to their future job prospects.

Lack of news literacy leads to the spread of false information
The lack of confidence in critical thinking abilities also has crucial ramifications for the spread of inaccurate information by millennials via social media:

  • More than half of the surveyed consumers (55%) rely on social media for news.
  • Half of those surveyed share online content very/fairly often (51%).

"We see a silver lining in what are clearly disturbing findings," said Jefferson Flanders, CEO of MindEdge. "Our key academic partners recognize this challenge and we've been working with them to incorporate digital literacy and critical thinking skills across the curriculum. Students can sharpen their critical thinking and can be better prepared for their civic and professional futures."

Source: MindEdge/PR Newswire

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8 Comments

    1. Hah, did you find yourself in those ‘nearly half’ that lack critical thinking or do you think the article has some hidden agenda? Is that what makes you mad?

      1. This article is not worthy to be within this website as it is nothing less but a hateful POLITICAL attack, FAKE FAKE FAKE, LIES, LIES, LIES! Fixing what you nuts deem ‘fake’ news…… (reality check, ‘TRUTH news’) is a NAZI fascist attempt at maintaining the upper hand in brainwashing and controlling the masses. YOU are the REAL DANGER the world faces today, not ISIS, YOU! Haven’t met a single person these days who are truly liberal. Rather just a bunch of mentally ill psychotic humanoid monsters, no less. It’s Nazi Germany all over again

        1. Thank you, I understand you now. I think we use the same term but understand it differently. Fake news come in all shapes and sizes and are all over the net, critical thinking and clear ‘n’ healthy mind is the way.

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