What worries me most about the rise of AI in education is not its speed, scale, or sophistication. It’s that children are beginning to outsource thinking before they’ve even learned how to think.
We’re witnessing the normalization of a quiet, dangerous shift. Tools like ChatGPT, Grammarly, and AI math solvers offer instant answers, polished essays, even plausible scientific hypotheses. But for a student who’s still developing their cognitive muscles, these tools don’t assist learning—they replace it. When used too early or too often, they short-circuit the very process that builds real intelligence: struggle.
It is in the friction of problem-solving—those moments of uncertainty, frustration, and wrong turns—that a young mind begins to truly grow. These uncomfortable stages are where reasoning is refined, critical thinking is built, and intuition is sparked. Bypassing that developmental grind for convenience robs students of the deeper transformation that education is meant to trigger.
Let me be clear: I’m not against AI. I’ve spent my life building AI systems—many of which have revolutionized sectors like fraud detection, healthcare, and national security. But we must recognize a crucial difference: AI excels at solving problems we already understand. It cannot invent solutions for problems we’ve never seen before. That’s still a uniquely human domain.
The Oil Spill Thought Experiment
Imagine this: there’s a massive oil spill in the ocean—something humanity has never dealt with before. There’s no blueprint, no manual, no prior dataset. You’re a young scientist or engineer asked to figure it out. Do you design booms to contain the spill? Create new chemical dispersants? Use robotic submarines to vacuum it up?
Now imagine that instead of wrestling with the problem, you simply ask an AI tool for the best solution. It offers a polished answer based on a blend of past strategies and existing literature. It sounds impressive. But here’s the problem: it’s guessing—repurposing yesterday’s data for today’s unknown.
Without the experience of grappling with hard, ambiguous questions, how will the next generation invent the tools the world doesn’t yet know it needs?
Learning Is Not a Transaction
Too many classrooms are becoming transactional. Students input a prompt, get a response, and move on. But real learning is transformational. It happens when a student encounters something confusing, questions it, and slowly builds a mental model that makes sense of the world.
That model doesn’t come from copying answers. It comes from failing, adapting, rethinking, and trying again. It comes from ownership of the struggle.
AI also discourages students from wrestling with uncertainty. When a machine gives you a confident answer in seconds, you never learn to live in the discomfort of “I’m not sure.” But it’s in those moments of doubt that real insight forms. The urge to verify, to reason through ambiguity—that’s what sharpens the mind.
Are We Creating a Generation of Zombie Thinkers?
The deeper concern is cultural. As students grow up with AI always within reach, they may begin to mistrust their own minds. They’ll rely on systems that sound more authoritative than their inner voice. Over time, this can create what I call zombie thinking—the ability to follow instructions without the ability to ask “why,” to repeat information without ever challenging it.
When human judgment is outsourced to machines, society loses something vital: its capacity for original thought.
How Do We Respond?
Educators and parents must not respond with blanket bans or fearmongering. Instead, we must double down on what makes human intelligence irreplaceable:
- Teach students that struggle is not a failure—it’s the path to understanding.
- Encourage them to verify, not just consume.
- Celebrate messy, original thinking over perfect, AI-polished answers.
- Design assignments that AI can’t easily complete—projects that require invention, not repetition.
Because the future will not be written by those who ask the best prompts. It will be shaped by those who ask the hardest questions—and dare to answer them in ways no one’s ever tried before.





























