The future is showing up fast - and letâs be honest, our education systems werenât built for this pace.
These four headlines from just the past week have me thinking deeply about what it means to âprepare studentsâ:
đ Axios: Entry-level white-collar jobs are disappearing fast Anthropicâs CEO doesnât sugarcoat it - the bottom rung of the job ladder is disappearing. AI is already impacting jobs many students once used to get their start - and it's happening faster than many of us thought possible. "AI could wipe out half of all entry-level white-collar jobs - and spike unemployment to 10-20% in the next one to five years", according to Dario Amodei.
đ§ Michigan: Statewide AI Literacy for Educators This is what bold leadership looks like - Michigan is making sure every educator in the state is equipped to understand and teach AI literacy. From district leadership to classroom teachers, theyâre all in.
đ§ UAE: Teaching 4-year-olds how to use AI Yes, four. The UAE is getting ahead of the curve by introducing AI Literacy and GenAI to the youngest learners â sparking questions about when we should start. The UAE is also the first OpenAI Stargate partner.
đ Estonia: AI Leap Initiative Estonia is rolling out AI-powered learning tools to 20,000 10-11 year students and training 3,000 teachers. And this is just the beginning - vocational schools and tens of thousands more students are next.
All of this raises some big, tough questions:
Should we be teaching AI literacy in preschool?
What happens to this yearâs high school grads if their major becomes obsolete before they even finish college?
Will four-year universities need to completely rethink their purpose?
Are we still teaching to standards that just donât make sense in this new reality?
How do we keep standards relevant â without overwhelming already stretched educators?
Michigan, Estonia, the UAE, and China (yep, theyâre doing it too) are all moving quickly to answer these questions.
Are we?