future of education

{Podcast} The Future of Education: Balancing AI and Human Ingenuity

Introduction

Recently, during a keynote address, an audience member asked a question that really hits home: “How do we stop kids in school from using AI tools like GPT?”

It’s a big concern, highlighting the ongoing tug-of-war between traditional education values and the surge of technology shaping our world.

As we navigate this new territory, we need to figure out how AI can coexist with our educational systems and actually make learning better.

Embracing Technological Integration

Let’s face it – technology is here to stay, and it’s a massive part of our lives. From primary school to university, most academic work is now digital, presented and assessed online. Tools like Turnitin are used to detect plagiarism and ensure that students’ work is their own. This “washing” process verifies the originality of the work, making it tough for students to pass off AI-generated content as their own.

Thinking back to my own experience, I remember the uproar when I brought a calculator into a maths class in the late 1970s. My teacher’s reaction was extreme – you’d have thought I’d brought in something truly dangerous.

But now, calculators are everywhere in education. AI will follow a similar path, becoming an accepted tool that enhances, rather than hinders, the learning process.

Shifting the Focus to Creative and Critical Thinking

The real challenge is changing how we teach and assess students. Traditional rote learning and memorisation are becoming obsolete. Instead, we need to focus on fostering creativity and critical thinking.

This shift requires educators to design assessment tasks that AI can’t easily complete, pushing students to produce original thought and personal insights.

During my keynote, a senior academic from a leading university in Victoria was in the audience. She mentioned that they’re developing policies to adapt teaching and assessment methods, rather than changing the curriculum.

By prioritising unique, student-driven responses over rote memorisation, we encourage deeper engagement and innovation.

While we wait for the system to change, there’s something we can do right now: change the way we teach, engage with students, and assess the curriculum.

This proactive approach can have an immediate impact, ensuring our students are better prepared for the future.

The Role of AI in Education

AI can revolutionise education by offering personalised learning experiences, identifying knowledge gaps, and providing targeted support. For example, AI-driven platforms can adapt to each student’s learning pace, ensuring they grasp fundamental concepts before moving on to more complex topics. This tailored approach can significantly enhance learning effectiveness.

Moreover, AI can assist teachers by handling administrative tasks, grading assignments, and offering insights into student performance. This frees up valuable time for educators to focus on what they do best: teaching, mentoring, and inspiring students.

However, it’s crucial to remember that AI is just a tool. It will never replace the human elements of education – great teachers and incredible students. AI can support and enhance the educational experience, but it is not education in and of itself. We need to ensure that the balance is always tilted towards the human side, valuing the creativity, intuition, and empathy that only people can bring.

The Future of Learning: Blending Tradition with Innovation

Looking ahead, we need to balance technological advancement with traditional educational values. While technology offers unprecedented opportunities, we must not lose sight of the importance of human interaction, creativity, and critical thinking.

Our education system must evolve to prepare students for a world where they’ll likely change careers multiple times and need to continually upskill.

This requires a flexible, on-demand education model that caters to different life phases and future job demands.

We must allow students the freedom to explore, play, and develop solutions, fostering an environment where creativity and innovation can thrive.

Education is now required through all stages of life – from early childhood to lifelong learning.

The question of who or what educates and how is crucial. As parents and adults, we need to stop wanting our children to be so safe and certain about their future careers that we lock them into an education system that stifles their growth.

The future is not a finite place, and our students will always need to adapt and evolve. Let’s make sure we prepare them as best as we can for this journey.

Provoking Thought

Let’s be honest, we’re at a crossroads. Our traditional education system, built for a bygone era, simply doesn’t fit today’s needs.

The world has changed, and so must our approach to education. We need to ask ourselves: Are we preparing students for yesterday’s world or tomorrow’s?

Are we valuing rote memorisation over creativity and critical thinking? These are tough questions, but they’re necessary if we’re serious about evolving our educational landscape.

There are so many elements conspiring to change the nature of education – human advancements, evolving notions of work, social changes, economic and political shifts, demographic trends, and technological breakthroughs. All these factors are reshaping the landscape and demanding a more dynamic, responsive approach to how we educate our young.

I discussed this recently with Phil Whelan during my weekly HK3 radio segment. We talked about how technology, especially AI, is reshaping the way we educate our kids. Phil pointed out that today’s children have known nothing but technology – it’s their norm.

And he’s right. We can’t keep bemoaning the loss of “the good old days” when the reality is that our kids are growing up in a very different world.

As I mentioned in that segment, we need to allow our students to be creative and explore. By the time they leave kindergarten, we’re already squeezing them into a toothpaste tube, pushing them out the other end in a uniform stream.

We can’t keep doing that. We need to let them play, experiment, and find solutions on their own. This is the only way they’ll survive – and thrive – in the future.

Reflections from the Blog

I’ve been pondering the future of education for a long time, and these thoughts have been a recurring theme in my blog posts. For instance, in 2016, I wrote about the need for an education system that prepares students for an unknown future in “Preparing Our Children for an Unknown World”. I emphasised the importance of teaching skills that are adaptable and relevant to the fast-changing world.

In “The Future of Education: Technology, People, Innovation” (2019), I discussed how technological advancements should be harnessed to create a more engaging and personalised learning experience. This aligns perfectly with our current need to integrate AI into education while maintaining a human touch.

Back in 2020, I explored the idea of future job demands in “The Jobs Our Kids Will Be Doing in 20 Years”, highlighting how education needs to evolve to meet these demands. This ties into our current discussion about preparing students for careers that don’t even exist yet.

Moreover, in my 2021 webinar, “Reshaping Higher Education: What Now, What Next?”, I addressed the necessity for higher education institutions to adapt to technological changes and to focus on developing critical thinking and problem-solving skills.

Education is a recurring topic I’ve written, spoken, and advised on the most around the globe – from K-12 to lifelong learners, from tertiary institutions to corporate training. It’s clear that education is now required through the seven stages of life. This is a really big deal. The question of who or what educates and how is crucial. And that’s not even touching on the possibility that Brain-Computer Interfaces (BCIs) might one day let us upload and download information directly into our brains.

Conclusion

So, what does all this mean? Well, the future of education is about embracing AI and other technological advancements while still valuing creativity and critical thinking.

We need to change our teaching methods and assessment techniques so that students aren’t just consuming information, but actually generating original ideas and solutions.

As we navigate this evolving landscape, it’s crucial to remember that technology should enhance human potential, not replace it.

We need to stop wanting our children to be so safe and certain about their future careers that we lock them into an education system that stops them from growing and expanding and taking advantage of what the future may hold. Let’s be real – we can’t predict the future with any certainty.

The combination of human intuition, creativity, and AI-driven efficiency promises a future where education is more personalised, effective, and inspiring. As we explore these possibilities, let’s stay committed to preparing our students for the dynamic, ever-changing world ahead.

And hey, if one day we can upload and download information directly into our brains with BCIs, that’ll just be another fascinating chapter in this journey!


For more thoughts and insights on the Future of Education, listen to these two podcasts:

Phil Whelan on HK3 radio (16 minutes 09 seconds):

Atlas Cook Triple M radio (5 minutes 26 seconds)


Further Reading on the Future of Education

Here are some of my past blog articles on education, listed in chronological order:

  1. Preparing Our Children for an Unknown World (2016)
  2. The Future of Education: Technology, People, Innovation (2019)
  3. The Jobs Our Kids Will Be Doing in 20 Years (2020)
  4. Reshaping Higher Education: What Now, What Next? (2021)
  5. Future of Work: How Today’s ISO Babies Will Work and Learn in 2038
  6. The Jobs Our Kids Will Be Doing in 20 Years Says a Lot About Our Future
  7. Skills Australia: The Jobs Today’s Newborns Will Need Says Futurist
  8. What Jobs Will Be in Demand in the Future
  9. Australia’s Most In-Demand Jobs for the Future Show What’s Really Important in Life
  10. Welcome to the Bio-Digital Age: Introducing Generation Beta
  11. Future Home Robots and Our Techno-Symbiotic Relationship
  12. The Education System Isn’t Future Ready (ABC Nightlife)
  13. Kids Will Live to 120 While Working Till 90
  14. Career Advice I Gave My Kids
  15. Today’s School Starters Will Be Unemployable by 2032
  16. Beautiful Future Career
  17. Let’s Put Education Front and Centre
  18. Education Future to Come (ABC Radio Nightlife)
  19. What Are We Growing If Useless Is the Question?
  20. The Education System Is Strangling Our Kids (6PR)
  21. Preparing Our Children for an Unknown World (Sky News)
  22. On-Stage Conversation About Education 2030
  23. Education 2030 (3AW, Austereo, ABC Overnights, ABC Far North QLD)
  24. Grow Child Magazine
  25. Career Advice from a Futurist
  26. Is Higher Education Doomed?
  27. Education Re-Imagined
  28. The Hypnosis and Neurosis of Education
  29. Year 12: A Parent’s Sanity Guide
  30. Teach ‘Em What They Need to Know
  31. Teach It Forward
  32. The Fount of Wisdom
  33. Sunrises on the Future of Education
  34. The Future of Education
  35. Postcards 2020: The Future of Education

Feel free to explore these articles for deeper insights into the future of education and how we can best prepare our students for the dynamic world ahead.


#FutureOfEducation #AIEducation #EdTech #InnovationInEducation #LeadershipInEducation #EducationalStrategy #LifelongLearning #CriticalThinking #CreativeThinking #InclusiveEducation #DynamicClassrooms #EducationalTransformation #StrategicEducation #FuturistInsights #MorrisMisel #KeyDecisionMakers #ManagementInsights #TechnologyIntegration #AdaptiveEducation #CEOInsights

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is AI’s fundamental challenge to the current educational model?

It exposes the degree to which education has been optimised for producing retrievable, demonstrable knowledge rather than developing genuine capability. If AI can write the essay, solve the problem set, and generate the analysis — and it can — then assessment methods that test whether students can do those things are not testing the right things. The deeper question is not ‘how do we stop students using AI?’ but ‘what should we be developing in students that AI makes more valuable, not less?’

Q: What does human ingenuity look like in a world with AI?

Critical judgment — the ability to evaluate AI output, identify its errors and biases, and determine what questions to ask. Creative synthesis — combining insights from different domains in ways that reflect genuine curiosity and experience rather than pattern matching. Ethical reasoning — the ability to navigate value conflicts that have no algorithmic solution. And relational capability — the human connection, empathy, and trust that AI cannot authentically replicate. Education that develops these capabilities will produce graduates who are genuinely valuable alongside AI, not competing with it.

Q: What practical changes should educational institutions be making now?

Redesigning assessment around AI-present rather than AI-absent performance. Emphasising process documentation and reasoning over polished outputs. Creating genuine problem-solving contexts that require judgment and adaptation rather than application of known methods. And having honest conversations with students about which capabilities they are developing — not to prepare them for a world without AI, but to prepare them to lead in a world with it.

Q: Can Morris Misel speak on the future of education, AI in learning, and developing future-ready capabilities?

Yes. Education futures and AI’s implications for learning are core keynote topics for education system, university, and corporate learning audiences. Book at morrismisel.com.

Morris Misel is a global foresight strategist and keynote speaker with 30+ years of experience across 160 industries and 25 countries. Creator of the Immediate Futures™, HUMAND™, and PTFA™ frameworks. Industry Fellow at Griffith University. Regular voice on RTHK Radio 3 (Hong Kong) and Australian media including ABC and Sky News. For keynotes, workshops, and advisory: morrismisel.com | Book Morris

What is The Future of Education?

Dive into the future of education with insights on balancing AI tools and human creativity. Learn how to prepare students for a dynamic world with innovative teaching methods.

How is The Future of Education changing how organisations work?

The impact of The Future of Education goes beyond process efficiency. It reshapes roles, redistributes decision-making authority, and changes the human skills that matter most. Leaders who understand these second and third-order consequences early have a real advantage over those waiting for the technology to stabilise before engaging.

What should business leaders understand about The Future of Education?

The most important question is not whether The Future of Education will matter, but how quickly it will matter in your specific context. Leaders benefit most from mapping the ripple effects early — not just the direct impact but the second and third-order consequences that arrive later and hit harder. That is the practical work of foresight.

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