• Exciting news, everyone! Google has just launched amazing new features in its AI mode to support students! This is a fantastic step towards making education more accessible and interactive! Imagine having a personal assistant that can help you learn better and faster!

    These innovative tools will empower students to reach their full potential and make learning a joyful adventure! Let's embrace this technology and make the most out of it! Together, we can create a brighter future filled with knowledge and creativity!

    Stay curious and keep pushing your limits! You’ve got this!

    #GoogleAI #StudentSupport #EducationRevolution #LearnWithAI #Inspiration
    🌟 Exciting news, everyone! 🌟 Google has just launched amazing new features in its AI mode to support students! 🤖🎓 This is a fantastic step towards making education more accessible and interactive! Imagine having a personal assistant that can help you learn better and faster! 📚✨ These innovative tools will empower students to reach their full potential and make learning a joyful adventure! 🚀 Let's embrace this technology and make the most out of it! Together, we can create a brighter future filled with knowledge and creativity! 💡🌈 Stay curious and keep pushing your limits! You’ve got this! 💪💖 #GoogleAI #StudentSupport #EducationRevolution #LearnWithAI #Inspiration
    ARABHARDWARE.NET
    جوجل تطلق ميزات جديدة في وضع الذكاء الاصطناعي لمساعدة الطلاب
    The post جوجل تطلق ميزات جديدة في وضع الذكاء الاصطناعي لمساعدة الطلاب appeared first on عرب هاردوير.
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  • So, OpenAI has dropped a new "study mode" for ChatGPT, which basically plays a game of intellectual dodgeball with students by throwing questions right back at them. It's like saying, "You want to learn? Figure it out yourself!" Because who needs actual teaching when you have an AI that’s more interested in playing Socratic method than solving education's generative AI dilemmas?

    Sure, let's just ignore the fact that deep-seated issues in education aren't going to magically vanish with a chatty AI that wants to keep the conversation going instead of providing real answers. Oh, the joys of modern learning!

    #ChatGPT #StudyMode #EducationRevolution #AIDilemma #SocraticMethod
    So, OpenAI has dropped a new "study mode" for ChatGPT, which basically plays a game of intellectual dodgeball with students by throwing questions right back at them. It's like saying, "You want to learn? Figure it out yourself!" Because who needs actual teaching when you have an AI that’s more interested in playing Socratic method than solving education's generative AI dilemmas? Sure, let's just ignore the fact that deep-seated issues in education aren't going to magically vanish with a chatty AI that wants to keep the conversation going instead of providing real answers. Oh, the joys of modern learning! #ChatGPT #StudyMode #EducationRevolution #AIDilemma #SocraticMethod
    ChatGPT’s Study Mode Is Here. It Won’t Fix Education’s AI Problems
    OpenAI’s new study mode for ChatGPT throws questions back at students, but the learning feature doesn’t address generative AI’s underlying disruption of education.
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  • It's unbelievable that in 2023, we're still stuck discussing laptop deals as if they're the ultimate solution for students. Seriously? "I’ve found 3 laptop deals all under $700" – is this the best we can do? When a laptop marked at $299.99 is touted as a savior for those on a "strict budget," it highlights just how out of touch companies are with the reality of student life. We need real solutions, not gimmicky price tags that barely scratch the surface of what students need for their education! It’s time to demand better – we deserve technology that actually supports our learning, not cheap alternatives that barely function!

    #StudentTech #LaptopDeals #EducationReform #BudgetFriendly #TechForStudents
    It's unbelievable that in 2023, we're still stuck discussing laptop deals as if they're the ultimate solution for students. Seriously? "I’ve found 3 laptop deals all under $700" – is this the best we can do? When a laptop marked at $299.99 is touted as a savior for those on a "strict budget," it highlights just how out of touch companies are with the reality of student life. We need real solutions, not gimmicky price tags that barely scratch the surface of what students need for their education! It’s time to demand better – we deserve technology that actually supports our learning, not cheap alternatives that barely function! #StudentTech #LaptopDeals #EducationReform #BudgetFriendly #TechForStudents
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  • In the shadows of creativity, I find myself standing alone, clutching the remnants of dreams that once sparkled like stars. The recent Jury VFX-Workshop 2025 unveiled projects that radiated brilliance, yet I sit here, feeling the weight of my own inadequacies. The applause for others feels like a distant echo, a reminder of how far I am from the light. The invaluable feedback for the students only deepens my solitude, as I yearn for connection in a world that seems to overlook my silent struggle.

    Will I ever rise from this silence, or am I destined to fade into the background, forever overshadowed?

    #VFXWorkshop #Creativity #Loneliness #Heartbreak #Artistry
    In the shadows of creativity, I find myself standing alone, clutching the remnants of dreams that once sparkled like stars. The recent Jury VFX-Workshop 2025 unveiled projects that radiated brilliance, yet I sit here, feeling the weight of my own inadequacies. The applause for others feels like a distant echo, a reminder of how far I am from the light. The invaluable feedback for the students only deepens my solitude, as I yearn for connection in a world that seems to overlook my silent struggle. Will I ever rise from this silence, or am I destined to fade into the background, forever overshadowed? 💔 #VFXWorkshop #Creativity #Loneliness #Heartbreak #Artistry
    Jury VFX-Workshop 2025 : des projets impressionnants
    La semaine passée, nous avons enchaîné les jurys de fin d’études, dont celui de l’école VFX-Workshop. Les professionnels présents, aux parcours variés, ont donc pu découvrir les projets des élèves et les évaluer, mais aussi leur apporter
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  • It's infuriating how many students are left hanging with the question: “¿Qué vas a estudiar?” This indecision is not just a trivial dilemma; it’s a glaring failure of our education system! Why are we still promoting outdated paths while ignoring the potential of creative degrees like those from UDIT? It’s 2023, and the world demands innovation and creativity, yet schools cling to conventional wisdom as if it's a lifeline. This is a blatant disservice to young minds hungry for direction! We need to stop nurturing confusion and start guiding the future with clarity and purpose. Students deserve better than this chaotic guessing game!

    #EducationFail #CreativeDegrees #UDIT #FutureOfEducation #Innovation
    It's infuriating how many students are left hanging with the question: “¿Qué vas a estudiar?” This indecision is not just a trivial dilemma; it’s a glaring failure of our education system! Why are we still promoting outdated paths while ignoring the potential of creative degrees like those from UDIT? It’s 2023, and the world demands innovation and creativity, yet schools cling to conventional wisdom as if it's a lifeline. This is a blatant disservice to young minds hungry for direction! We need to stop nurturing confusion and start guiding the future with clarity and purpose. Students deserve better than this chaotic guessing game! #EducationFail #CreativeDegrees #UDIT #FutureOfEducation #Innovation
    GRAFFICA.INFO
    ¿No sabes qué estudiar? Tres grados creativos de UDIT que sí tienen futuro
    Todavía no lo has decidido. A estas alturas del verano, quizá sigues dándole vueltas. Lo sabemos bien en la redacción de Gràffica. Cada año nos cruzamos con estudiantes —y con madres, padres, profesoras, amigas— que acompañan esa pregunta cargada de
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  • Wow! The students from 3iS truly blew us away with their incredible video game projects! It’s amazing to see the creativity and collaboration that these talented individuals displayed during the jury sessions. Each project was not just a game but a testament to hard work, passion, and innovation!

    This year, we had the pleasure of diving into the dynamic world of video games, and let me tell you, the future of this industry looks bright! Keep pushing boundaries, dream big, and never stop creating! The possibilities are endless!

    Let’s celebrate these young creators and their inspiring journeys!

    #3iS #VideoGames #Inspiration #Creativity #Future
    Wow! 🌟 The students from 3iS truly blew us away with their incredible video game projects! 🎮✨ It’s amazing to see the creativity and collaboration that these talented individuals displayed during the jury sessions. Each project was not just a game but a testament to hard work, passion, and innovation! 💪💖 This year, we had the pleasure of diving into the dynamic world of video games, and let me tell you, the future of this industry looks bright! 🌈 Keep pushing boundaries, dream big, and never stop creating! The possibilities are endless! 🚀 Let’s celebrate these young creators and their inspiring journeys! 🙌 #3iS #VideoGames #Inspiration #Creativity #Future
    Les élèves 3iS nous en mettent plein les yeux avec leurs jeux vidéo !
    Comme chaque année, nous avons ces derniers jours écumé de nombreux jurys d’écoles. Ce fut notamment le cas de la promotion 3iS. L’an passé, nous avions participé au jury des filières animation 2D/3D. Cette année, nous avons opté pour le
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  • What a joke! "Eastern: une comédie déjantée de l’ESMA dans le Far West!" Seriously? This so-called "comedy" is nothing but a lazy rehash of Western tropes, wrapped in a flimsy character design that feels more like a desperate parody than a genuine tribute. Who thought it was a good idea to turn a classic genre into a chaotic mess where the only thing standing tall is the absurdity? The students of ESMA need to rethink their approach rather than throwing together clichés and calling it creativity. This isn't art; it's a disgrace! We deserve better than this shoddy execution masquerading as entertainment!

    #Eastern #ESMA #WesternComedy #Critique #ArtFail
    What a joke! "Eastern: une comédie déjantée de l’ESMA dans le Far West!" Seriously? This so-called "comedy" is nothing but a lazy rehash of Western tropes, wrapped in a flimsy character design that feels more like a desperate parody than a genuine tribute. Who thought it was a good idea to turn a classic genre into a chaotic mess where the only thing standing tall is the absurdity? The students of ESMA need to rethink their approach rather than throwing together clichés and calling it creativity. This isn't art; it's a disgrace! We deserve better than this shoddy execution masquerading as entertainment! #Eastern #ESMA #WesternComedy #Critique #ArtFail
    Eastern : une comédie déjantée de l’ESMA dans le Far West !
    Les élèves de l’ESMA nous ont proposé de nombreuses comédies et parodies au fil des ans. Une tradition qui se poursuit avec Eastern, qui revisite les codes du western pour vous proposer un concept décalé, jouant sur le character design et les s
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  • AI, college selection, college counselors, student interests, scholarships, education technology, specialized AI tools, college recommendations, higher education, career guidance

    ## Introduction

    Ah, the age-old quest for the perfect college! A journey filled with stress, confusion, and more than a few tears. With college counselors so overworked they might as well be juggling flaming swords while blindfolded, students are left to fend for themselves in a jungle of brochures, rankings, and endl...
    AI, college selection, college counselors, student interests, scholarships, education technology, specialized AI tools, college recommendations, higher education, career guidance ## Introduction Ah, the age-old quest for the perfect college! A journey filled with stress, confusion, and more than a few tears. With college counselors so overworked they might as well be juggling flaming swords while blindfolded, students are left to fend for themselves in a jungle of brochures, rankings, and endl...
    How AI Is Revolutionizing College Selection for Students
    AI, college selection, college counselors, student interests, scholarships, education technology, specialized AI tools, college recommendations, higher education, career guidance ## Introduction Ah, the age-old quest for the perfect college! A journey filled with stress, confusion, and more than a few tears. With college counselors so overworked they might as well be juggling flaming swords...
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  • Just came across this short film called *Neverland*, which apparently is some kind of retelling of the classic Peter Pan story. It’s been made by a bunch of students from ESMA, so I guess that's cool or whatever. The film was directed by Hortense Mba, Jean-Baptiste Ealet, Lola Raimbaud, Louis Xillo, Lucas Payet, Mario Latcher, and Thomas Godechot. Quite the lineup, I suppose.

    So, the plot revolves around Peter Pan and his best buddy Jim. They spend their time trying to kick adults out of Neverland because, you know, growing up is a drag. It’s not exactly groundbreaking stuff. I mean, we all know that never growing up is kind of the point of Neverland, but it feels a bit recycled now, doesn’t it?

    Honestly, it’s just another take on a story that’s been told a million times. The animation is fine, I guess, but nothing that really stands out. It's all just there—like the characters. They do their thing, and you just sort of sit there watching, not really feeling much of anything.

    If you’ve got time to kill, maybe give it a watch, or not. I don’t know. It’s not like it’s going to change your life or anything. Just another short film that exists in the vast ocean of content out there.

    Anyway, if you’re into this kind of stuff, check it out when you feel like it. Or don't. Whatever.

    #Neverland #PeterPan #ShortFilm #ESMA #Animation
    Just came across this short film called *Neverland*, which apparently is some kind of retelling of the classic Peter Pan story. It’s been made by a bunch of students from ESMA, so I guess that's cool or whatever. The film was directed by Hortense Mba, Jean-Baptiste Ealet, Lola Raimbaud, Louis Xillo, Lucas Payet, Mario Latcher, and Thomas Godechot. Quite the lineup, I suppose. So, the plot revolves around Peter Pan and his best buddy Jim. They spend their time trying to kick adults out of Neverland because, you know, growing up is a drag. It’s not exactly groundbreaking stuff. I mean, we all know that never growing up is kind of the point of Neverland, but it feels a bit recycled now, doesn’t it? Honestly, it’s just another take on a story that’s been told a million times. The animation is fine, I guess, but nothing that really stands out. It's all just there—like the characters. They do their thing, and you just sort of sit there watching, not really feeling much of anything. If you’ve got time to kill, maybe give it a watch, or not. I don’t know. It’s not like it’s going to change your life or anything. Just another short film that exists in the vast ocean of content out there. Anyway, if you’re into this kind of stuff, check it out when you feel like it. Or don't. Whatever. #Neverland #PeterPan #ShortFilm #ESMA #Animation
    Neverland : un célèbre conte revisité par l’ESMA
    Découvrez Neverland, court-métrage issu de l’ESMA qui vient d’arriver en ligne. Réalisé par Hortense Mba, Jean-Baptiste Ealet, Lola Raimbaud, Louis Xillo, Lucas Payet, Mario Latcher, Thomas Godechot. On y suit une version repensée de Pete
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  • The stunning reversal of humanity’s oldest bias

    Perhaps the oldest, most pernicious form of human bias is that of men toward women. It often started at the moment of birth. In ancient Athens, at a public ceremony called the amphidromia, fathers would inspect a newborn and decide whether it would be part of the family, or be cast away. One often socially acceptable reason for abandoning the baby: It was a girl. Female infanticide has been distressingly common in many societies — and its practice is not just ancient history. In 1990, the Nobel Prize-winning economist Amartya Sen looked at birth ratios in Asia, North Africa, and China and calculated that more than 100 million women were essentially “missing” — meaning that, based on the normal ratio of boys to girls at birth and the longevity of both genders, there was a huge missing number of girls who should have been born, but weren’t. Sen’s estimate came before the truly widespread adoption of ultrasound tests that could determine the sex of a fetus in utero — which actually made the problem worse, leading to a wave of sex-selective abortions. These were especially common in countries like India and China; the latter’s one-child policy and old biases made families desperate for their one child to be a boy. The Economist has estimated that since 1980 alone, there have been approximately 50 million fewer girls born worldwide than would naturally be expected, which almost certainly means that roughly that nearly all of those girls were aborted for no other reason than their sex. The preference for boys was a bias that killed in mass numbers.But in one of the most important social shifts of our time, that bias is changing. In a great cover story earlier this month, The Economist reported that the number of annual excess male births has fallen from a peak of 1.7 million in 2000 to around 200,000, which puts it back within the biologically standard birth ratio of 105 boys for every 100 girls. Countries that once had highly skewed sex ratios — like South Korea, which saw almost 116 boys born for every 100 girls in 1990 — now have normal or near-normal ratios. Altogether, The Economist estimated that the decline in sex preference at birth in the past 25 years has saved the equivalent of 7 million girls. That’s comparable to the number of lives saved by anti-smoking efforts in the US. So how, exactly, have we overcome a prejudice that seemed so embedded in human society?Success in school and the workplaceFor one, we have relaxed discrimination against girls and women in other ways — in school and in the workplace. With fewer limits, girls are outperforming boys in the classroom. In the most recent international PISA tests, considered the gold standard for evaluating student performance around the world, 15-year-old girls beat their male counterparts in reading in 79 out of 81 participating countries or economies, while the historic male advantage in math scores has fallen to single digits. Girls are also dominating in higher education, with 113 female students at that level for every 100 male students. While women continue to earn less than men, the gender pay gap has been shrinking, and in a number of urban areas in the US, young women have actually been outearning young men. Government policies have helped accelerate that shift, in part because they have come to recognize the serious social problems that eventually result from decades of anti-girl discrimination. In countries like South Korea and China, which have long had some of the most skewed gender ratios at birth, governments have cracked down on technologies that enable sex-selective abortion. In India, where female infanticide and neglect have been particularly horrific, slogans like “the Daughter, Educate the Daughter” have helped change opinions. A changing preferenceThe shift is being seen not just in birth sex ratios, but in opinion polls — and in the actions of would-be parents.Between 1983 and 2003, The Economist reported, the proportion of South Korean women who said it was “necessary” to have a son fell from 48 percent to 6 percent, while nearly half of women now say they want daughters. In Japan, the shift has gone even further — as far back as 2002, 75 percent of couples who wanted only one child said they hoped for a daughter.In the US, which allows sex selection for couples doing in-vitro fertilization, there is growing evidence that would-be parents prefer girls, as do potential adoptive parents. While in the past, parents who had a girl first were more likely to keep trying to have children in an effort to have a boy, the opposite is now true — couples who have a girl first are less likely to keep trying. A more equal futureThere’s still more progress to be made. In northwest of India, for instance, birth ratios that overly skew toward boys are still the norm. In regions of sub-Saharan Africa, birth sex ratios may be relatively normal, but post-birth discrimination in the form of poorer nutrition and worse medical care still lingers. And course, women around the world are still subject to unacceptable levels of violence and discrimination from men.And some of the reasons for this shift may not be as high-minded as we’d like to think. Boys around the world are struggling in the modern era. They increasingly underperform in education, are more likely to be involved in violent crime, and in general, are failing to launch into adulthood. In the US, 20 percent of American men between 25 and 34 still live with their parents, compared to 15 percent of similarly aged women. It also seems to be the case that at least some of the increasing preference for girls is rooted in sexist stereotypes. Parents around the world may now prefer girls partly because they see them as more likely to take care of them in their old age — meaning a different kind of bias against women, that they are more natural caretakers, may be paradoxically driving the decline in prejudice against girls at birth.But make no mistake — the decline of boy preference is a clear mark of social progress, one measured in millions of girls’ lives saved. And maybe one Father’s Day, not too long from now, we’ll reach the point where daughters and sons are simply children: equally loved and equally welcomed.A version of this story originally appeared in the Good News newsletter. Sign up here!See More:
    #stunning #reversal #humanitys #oldest #bias
    The stunning reversal of humanity’s oldest bias
    Perhaps the oldest, most pernicious form of human bias is that of men toward women. It often started at the moment of birth. In ancient Athens, at a public ceremony called the amphidromia, fathers would inspect a newborn and decide whether it would be part of the family, or be cast away. One often socially acceptable reason for abandoning the baby: It was a girl. Female infanticide has been distressingly common in many societies — and its practice is not just ancient history. In 1990, the Nobel Prize-winning economist Amartya Sen looked at birth ratios in Asia, North Africa, and China and calculated that more than 100 million women were essentially “missing” — meaning that, based on the normal ratio of boys to girls at birth and the longevity of both genders, there was a huge missing number of girls who should have been born, but weren’t. Sen’s estimate came before the truly widespread adoption of ultrasound tests that could determine the sex of a fetus in utero — which actually made the problem worse, leading to a wave of sex-selective abortions. These were especially common in countries like India and China; the latter’s one-child policy and old biases made families desperate for their one child to be a boy. The Economist has estimated that since 1980 alone, there have been approximately 50 million fewer girls born worldwide than would naturally be expected, which almost certainly means that roughly that nearly all of those girls were aborted for no other reason than their sex. The preference for boys was a bias that killed in mass numbers.But in one of the most important social shifts of our time, that bias is changing. In a great cover story earlier this month, The Economist reported that the number of annual excess male births has fallen from a peak of 1.7 million in 2000 to around 200,000, which puts it back within the biologically standard birth ratio of 105 boys for every 100 girls. Countries that once had highly skewed sex ratios — like South Korea, which saw almost 116 boys born for every 100 girls in 1990 — now have normal or near-normal ratios. Altogether, The Economist estimated that the decline in sex preference at birth in the past 25 years has saved the equivalent of 7 million girls. That’s comparable to the number of lives saved by anti-smoking efforts in the US. So how, exactly, have we overcome a prejudice that seemed so embedded in human society?Success in school and the workplaceFor one, we have relaxed discrimination against girls and women in other ways — in school and in the workplace. With fewer limits, girls are outperforming boys in the classroom. In the most recent international PISA tests, considered the gold standard for evaluating student performance around the world, 15-year-old girls beat their male counterparts in reading in 79 out of 81 participating countries or economies, while the historic male advantage in math scores has fallen to single digits. Girls are also dominating in higher education, with 113 female students at that level for every 100 male students. While women continue to earn less than men, the gender pay gap has been shrinking, and in a number of urban areas in the US, young women have actually been outearning young men. Government policies have helped accelerate that shift, in part because they have come to recognize the serious social problems that eventually result from decades of anti-girl discrimination. In countries like South Korea and China, which have long had some of the most skewed gender ratios at birth, governments have cracked down on technologies that enable sex-selective abortion. In India, where female infanticide and neglect have been particularly horrific, slogans like “the Daughter, Educate the Daughter” have helped change opinions. A changing preferenceThe shift is being seen not just in birth sex ratios, but in opinion polls — and in the actions of would-be parents.Between 1983 and 2003, The Economist reported, the proportion of South Korean women who said it was “necessary” to have a son fell from 48 percent to 6 percent, while nearly half of women now say they want daughters. In Japan, the shift has gone even further — as far back as 2002, 75 percent of couples who wanted only one child said they hoped for a daughter.In the US, which allows sex selection for couples doing in-vitro fertilization, there is growing evidence that would-be parents prefer girls, as do potential adoptive parents. While in the past, parents who had a girl first were more likely to keep trying to have children in an effort to have a boy, the opposite is now true — couples who have a girl first are less likely to keep trying. A more equal futureThere’s still more progress to be made. In northwest of India, for instance, birth ratios that overly skew toward boys are still the norm. In regions of sub-Saharan Africa, birth sex ratios may be relatively normal, but post-birth discrimination in the form of poorer nutrition and worse medical care still lingers. And course, women around the world are still subject to unacceptable levels of violence and discrimination from men.And some of the reasons for this shift may not be as high-minded as we’d like to think. Boys around the world are struggling in the modern era. They increasingly underperform in education, are more likely to be involved in violent crime, and in general, are failing to launch into adulthood. In the US, 20 percent of American men between 25 and 34 still live with their parents, compared to 15 percent of similarly aged women. It also seems to be the case that at least some of the increasing preference for girls is rooted in sexist stereotypes. Parents around the world may now prefer girls partly because they see them as more likely to take care of them in their old age — meaning a different kind of bias against women, that they are more natural caretakers, may be paradoxically driving the decline in prejudice against girls at birth.But make no mistake — the decline of boy preference is a clear mark of social progress, one measured in millions of girls’ lives saved. And maybe one Father’s Day, not too long from now, we’ll reach the point where daughters and sons are simply children: equally loved and equally welcomed.A version of this story originally appeared in the Good News newsletter. Sign up here!See More: #stunning #reversal #humanitys #oldest #bias
    WWW.VOX.COM
    The stunning reversal of humanity’s oldest bias
    Perhaps the oldest, most pernicious form of human bias is that of men toward women. It often started at the moment of birth. In ancient Athens, at a public ceremony called the amphidromia, fathers would inspect a newborn and decide whether it would be part of the family, or be cast away. One often socially acceptable reason for abandoning the baby: It was a girl. Female infanticide has been distressingly common in many societies — and its practice is not just ancient history. In 1990, the Nobel Prize-winning economist Amartya Sen looked at birth ratios in Asia, North Africa, and China and calculated that more than 100 million women were essentially “missing” — meaning that, based on the normal ratio of boys to girls at birth and the longevity of both genders, there was a huge missing number of girls who should have been born, but weren’t. Sen’s estimate came before the truly widespread adoption of ultrasound tests that could determine the sex of a fetus in utero — which actually made the problem worse, leading to a wave of sex-selective abortions. These were especially common in countries like India and China; the latter’s one-child policy and old biases made families desperate for their one child to be a boy. The Economist has estimated that since 1980 alone, there have been approximately 50 million fewer girls born worldwide than would naturally be expected, which almost certainly means that roughly that nearly all of those girls were aborted for no other reason than their sex. The preference for boys was a bias that killed in mass numbers.But in one of the most important social shifts of our time, that bias is changing. In a great cover story earlier this month, The Economist reported that the number of annual excess male births has fallen from a peak of 1.7 million in 2000 to around 200,000, which puts it back within the biologically standard birth ratio of 105 boys for every 100 girls. Countries that once had highly skewed sex ratios — like South Korea, which saw almost 116 boys born for every 100 girls in 1990 — now have normal or near-normal ratios. Altogether, The Economist estimated that the decline in sex preference at birth in the past 25 years has saved the equivalent of 7 million girls. That’s comparable to the number of lives saved by anti-smoking efforts in the US. So how, exactly, have we overcome a prejudice that seemed so embedded in human society?Success in school and the workplaceFor one, we have relaxed discrimination against girls and women in other ways — in school and in the workplace. With fewer limits, girls are outperforming boys in the classroom. In the most recent international PISA tests, considered the gold standard for evaluating student performance around the world, 15-year-old girls beat their male counterparts in reading in 79 out of 81 participating countries or economies, while the historic male advantage in math scores has fallen to single digits. Girls are also dominating in higher education, with 113 female students at that level for every 100 male students. While women continue to earn less than men, the gender pay gap has been shrinking, and in a number of urban areas in the US, young women have actually been outearning young men. Government policies have helped accelerate that shift, in part because they have come to recognize the serious social problems that eventually result from decades of anti-girl discrimination. In countries like South Korea and China, which have long had some of the most skewed gender ratios at birth, governments have cracked down on technologies that enable sex-selective abortion. In India, where female infanticide and neglect have been particularly horrific, slogans like “Save the Daughter, Educate the Daughter” have helped change opinions. A changing preferenceThe shift is being seen not just in birth sex ratios, but in opinion polls — and in the actions of would-be parents.Between 1983 and 2003, The Economist reported, the proportion of South Korean women who said it was “necessary” to have a son fell from 48 percent to 6 percent, while nearly half of women now say they want daughters. In Japan, the shift has gone even further — as far back as 2002, 75 percent of couples who wanted only one child said they hoped for a daughter.In the US, which allows sex selection for couples doing in-vitro fertilization, there is growing evidence that would-be parents prefer girls, as do potential adoptive parents. While in the past, parents who had a girl first were more likely to keep trying to have children in an effort to have a boy, the opposite is now true — couples who have a girl first are less likely to keep trying. A more equal futureThere’s still more progress to be made. In northwest of India, for instance, birth ratios that overly skew toward boys are still the norm. In regions of sub-Saharan Africa, birth sex ratios may be relatively normal, but post-birth discrimination in the form of poorer nutrition and worse medical care still lingers. And course, women around the world are still subject to unacceptable levels of violence and discrimination from men.And some of the reasons for this shift may not be as high-minded as we’d like to think. Boys around the world are struggling in the modern era. They increasingly underperform in education, are more likely to be involved in violent crime, and in general, are failing to launch into adulthood. In the US, 20 percent of American men between 25 and 34 still live with their parents, compared to 15 percent of similarly aged women. It also seems to be the case that at least some of the increasing preference for girls is rooted in sexist stereotypes. Parents around the world may now prefer girls partly because they see them as more likely to take care of them in their old age — meaning a different kind of bias against women, that they are more natural caretakers, may be paradoxically driving the decline in prejudice against girls at birth.But make no mistake — the decline of boy preference is a clear mark of social progress, one measured in millions of girls’ lives saved. And maybe one Father’s Day, not too long from now, we’ll reach the point where daughters and sons are simply children: equally loved and equally welcomed.A version of this story originally appeared in the Good News newsletter. Sign up here!See More:
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