The problem has never been technology, but our education system, which has been running for decades, has seriously failed: universities are issuing certificates in batches, but the market is rejecting them in batches; young people are fed fantasy, but no one teaches them how to work.

1. Your academic qualifications are quietly depreciating

1. Everyone can go to college, but is it really suitable?

In 2023, the gross enrollment rate of higher education will reach 60%. This means that more than half of high school students, regardless of whether they have academic foundation or whether they are willing to study, have been pushed into college.

No one asked: Do you really want to study, or is it just because "there is no way out if you don't go to college"? The result? Some people are watching short videos in class, some are dozing off, and the teacher doesn't bother to care - anyway, as long as you don't drop out of school, the school can get funding and the graduation rate will be good.

The original intention of education has long since changed from "cultivating talents" to "fulfilling targets."

2. "Qualified graduates" released by letting go of water

When graduation rate becomes a hard indicator, teaching quality becomes a soft indicator. The usual points are basically free, just pass the paper if you can, and just get a stamp for the internship.

The graduation rate of a provincial university in the past five years has been as high as 98.7%, but when the company HR mentions the fresh graduates, the first reaction is: "the practical ability is too poor."

So the resume is full of "proficient in Office", but it turns out that he can't even use an Excel pivot table; when writing "award-winning experience in school", he filled in "won the 'One More Bottle' award multiple times."

This is not a joke, it is reality. When a diploma no longer represents ability, it is just a piece of paper—and expensive.