Crossing Faulty Lines
- Marc A. Tager
- Oct 29, 2024
- 3 min read
Updated: 5 days ago
I recently had a discussion with my eldest daughter about the attitudes of Gen Z toward life, well she spoke and I listened intently. The conversation was illuminating and helped me bring my opinions to the 21st century. I had looked with envy at Gen Z as growing up entitled with AI, the internet, Virtual Reality and even OnlyFans, my closest comparable was Atari Pong, Encyclopedias and stealing a look at a PlayBoy Magazine; they don’t know how easy they have it. While those things are true they are also staring in the face of unaffordable home prices, skyrocketing health care and inflation that depress hope for the lives their parents lived. I have been chewing on this for more than a week so it was a smooth transition to write about.
"Gen Z Knows What It Wants from Employers. And Employers Want Them”
The New York Times article, “Gen Z Knows What It Wants from Employers. And Employers Want Them,” by Alyson Krueger, focuses on a contemporary issue in society. Gen Z is a contentious subject given their supposed different outlook on society. I selected the article given its novel subject matter and the fact that Gen Z has been misrepresented and misunderstood by the older generation. The author is from an older generation, though younger than me, and shares the demands of Gen Z in the employment market.
First, the title is a sweeping claim that Gen Z knows what they want. It amounts to oversimplification and bias, and there is limited scientific data to support that Gen Z is more self-directed than other generations. Some people across all generations are inquisitive, objective, and decisive, and there are just as many people who are unsure and lost. I have one child that has a plan and another searching, though following his dream and playing college football. The article reads as a simple take on Gen Z using isolated experiences to make sweeping generalizations about a generation. Some Gen Zs conform to the traditional working culture, fit in the office spaces, and are in tune with the corporate heartbeat. The article glosses over the differences in the younger generation and focuses on individual cases to make a thesis about an entire group.
The author links sources in the article to support some of the claims. It includes the finding that "40 percent of young workers said they were willing to accept a 5 percent pay cut to work in a position that offered career growth opportunities." However, there is limited descriptive content about the linked survey, which limits the article's objectivity. To limit bias, the author overstates external opinions and references, denying the article the needed depth and range to discuss the concept of Gen Z in the modern work environment. The excessive obsession with maintaining objectivity or creating the impression of rationality often exuberates the fault lines. Writing across fault lines demands the deliberate action of accepting diversity in thought without attempting to overstate one side to benefit the main position. Ideally, a discussion on Gen Z's conceptualization of work and life should not understate or ignore the older generation's perspective. It is limiting to assume that older generation employers are wholeheartedly welcome to the observed Gen Z obsession with fluid work arrangements and non-traditional structures that do not conform to order and stability. The impression created by the article that employers are openly willing to alter their organizational culture and structures to accommodate new ideas is limiting and shallow. It fails to fully account for the generational gap and the obvious conflict between old and new.
The article presents an important discussion of modern work culture and the changing generation. However, observing across fault lines means embracing chaos and differences and seeking understanding and perspective. Observing the work environment from the lens of Gen Z and labeling it as the standard culture in contemporary space ignores the conflicting perspectives held by the majority of the older generation. Gen represents a different and radical cultural shift shaped by decades of counterculture movements. However, traditional work environments are founded on key and practical principles that organizations hold in high regard. I found the article a one-sided account of the Gen Z experience, and it motivated me to discuss supposedly shocking revelations in the work culture. In the deliberate attempt to cross the fault lines, the author creates a one-sided and shallow press.
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