Gen Z letting go of computer typing skills in digital age
Generation Z is the first to grow up using digital technology. However, there is one skill in this area that young people are not practicing.
3:18 PM EDT, August 27, 2024
Generation Z (born between 1997 and 2012) is the first to be raised entirely in the digital era. One might expect its members to be experts in all aspects of technology use. However, it turns out that the popularity of tablets and smartphones has made Gen Zers not masters of typing on a computer keyboard.
Is Generation Z moving away from typing on a keyboard?
The topic gained media attention when singer and songwriter Billie Eilish (born in 2001) confessed in an interview with "The Rolling Stone" magazine: "I never learned to type on a keyboard because I wasn't part of that generation, and now I regret it." Instructure, a company based in the United States that creates platforms for students to submit assignments electronically, reported in May 2024 that 39 percent of tasks submitted that month were written on a mobile device, not a computer.
Is Generation Z's lack of practice using a keyboard really a problem? Difficulties may arise in work environments where efficiency and typing speed matter. Typing on a physical QWERTY keyboard is faster than on those displayed on touchscreens. However, this is no longer the rule.
What is worsening young people's typing skills?
In 2019, a study of 37,000 people typing on a keyboard conducted by Alto University and the University of Cambridge found that the typing speed on a smartphone is now catching up with typing speed on a computer, especially among young people. The study found that the difference in typing speed between a smartphone and a computer was only 25 percent. This difference was even smaller among people aged 10-19, who could type on a phone an average of 10 words per minute faster than people aged 40.
Does this mean that Gen Z will sit in offices with smartphones in hand? Why not, especially if they work remotely? The main author of the study, Dr. Per Ola Kristensson, told dailymail.com that he has more serious concerns regarding the impact of technology on Generation Z and Alpha. The scientist stated: "I suspect that autocorrect and generative artificial intelligence will have a greater negative impact on writing skills."