Rethinking Education in the Age of AI
By: Dr. Reyaz Ahmad
The global education system, including India’s, is at a critical crossroads. As conversations intensify around the relevance, structure, and delivery of education, it becomes evident that the traditional models are struggling to keep pace with the demands of the modern world.
The current system emphasizes rote learning and theoretical knowledge over the application of learning to real-world challenges. Moreover, a growing school of thought questions the very age at which structured education should begin, suggesting that true learning should be delayed until children are cognitively and emotionally mature enough to make informed choices about their education.
In this digital era, particularly in the context of Artificial Intelligence (AI), these concerns are not just academic. They call for urgent and pragmatic reforms.
- The Crisis of Relevance in Current Educational Systems
The current education model in India, and in many parts of the world, is rooted in an industrial-era mind-set. Students are treated more like products on an assembly line than individuals with diverse talents, aspirations, and learning styles. The system focuses heavily on memorizing facts, mastering formulaic methods, and clearing standardized examinations.
While this model may have served past generations well, it is ill-equipped to prepare students for a future where adaptability, creativity, emotional intelligence, and technological literacy are far more valuable than static knowledge. It has created a generation of degree-holders who are often ill-prepared for problem-solving in dynamic real-life or workplace situations.
- Early Education: Too Soon or Too Structured?
Another pressing debate is whether children should begin formal schooling at a very young age. While early learning does have its advantages, over-structuring and academic pressure in the formative years can stifle curiosity, creativity, and natural development. Countries like Finland have successfully demonstrated that delaying formal education until the age of 7 can lead to better academic and emotional outcomes in the long run.
The argument is not about keeping children away from learning but about the kind of learning they engage in. At early stages, the focus should be on play-based, exploratory, and experience-driven learning that aligns with natural developmental stages rather than rigid academic benchmarks.
- The Indian Coaching Culture: Mass-Producing Degrees, Not Thinkers
From an Indian perspective, the booming coaching industry—especially for engineering (IIT-JEE), medical (NEET), and government job aspirants (UPSC, SSC, Banking)—has created a parallel education universe that prioritizes rote learning and mechanical test-cracking strategies over real understanding.
According to a 2022 report by the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO), over 7.1 crore students across India attend private coaching classes. In cities like Kota (Rajasthan), thousands of students migrate annually, creating a “coaching economy” worth over ₹5,000 crore. These institutions focus obsessively on marks and ranks, often ignoring the mental well-being, creativity, and individuality of students.
Impact on Students and Society:
- A 2019 study by the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) found that over 60% of students in coaching centers felt extremely stressed and demotivated.
- The suicide rate in Kota, one of the coaching hubs, has consistently raised national alarms, with 25 student suicides reported in 2023 alone.
- Students spend 4–6 years preparing for competitive exams, and even after clearing them, they often lack the skills needed for innovation or leadership.
- According to NITI Aayog data, only 5% of India’s engineering graduates are considered employable in core engineering roles, reflecting a disconnect between exam success and workplace readiness.
The damage extends beyond individuals. This coaching-centric culture:
- Discourages entrepreneurship, as students are groomed to become job seekers, not job creators.
- Kills problem-solving instincts, replacing them with template-based answers.
- Promotes a herd mentality, draining communities of diverse talents and original thinkers.
- Creates deep socioeconomic divides, as only those who can afford expensive coaching get ahead in the rat race.
- The Digital Disruption and the AI Revolution
We now live in a world where information is readily available, and AI tools can perform tasks that once required years of academic training. This has profound implications for what and how we teach. Education must evolve from content delivery to skill development, from knowledge acquisition to problem-solving, from passive absorption to active creation.
With AI capable of tutoring, assessing, translating, writing, and even coding, the question arises: what is the role of the human educator? The answer lies in human values—creativity, ethics, empathy, and judgment—traits that machines cannot replicate. The goal of modern education should thus be to cultivate uniquely human abilities in tandem with technological proficiency.
- Pragmatic Approaches for a Relevant and Humane Education
- Curriculum Redesign
- Shift from textbook-heavy curricula to interdisciplinary, project-based learning.
- Include real-world problem-solving activities and case studies in every subject.
- Teach students how to learn, not just what to learn.
- Delay High-Stakes Testing
- De-emphasize high-stakes exams at early ages.
- Use formative assessments and portfolio evaluations to gauge progress and creativity.
- Encourage failure as a step in the learning process, not a point of punishment.
- Emphasize Socio-Emotional and Ethical Learning
- Integrate emotional intelligence, mindfulness, ethics, and digital citizenship from early schooling.
- Promote classroom discussions that foster empathy, inclusion, and global awareness.
- Leverage AI for Personalization
- Use AI tools to deliver personalized content suited to individual learning speeds and styles.
- Free up teachers’ time from administrative tasks, enabling them to focus on mentorship and creativity.
- Flexible Learning Pathways
- Provide students with options: vocational training, academic specialization, creative arts, or entrepreneurship—all of which are equally valued.
- Encourage lifelong learning and continuous upskilling rather than seeing education as a one-time event limited to childhood and early adulthood.
- Parental and Community Involvement
- Engage parents and communities in co-creating learning experiences.
- Encourage learning outside classrooms: internships, social work, travel, and digital collaborations.
- Conclusion: Learning to Live, Not Just to Earn
The education system must no longer be a relic of the past but a bridge to the future. In this AI-driven era, we must prepare learners not just to survive but to thrive—as thoughtful citizens, compassionate humans, and agile professionals. This means letting go of rigid timelines, outdated syllabi, and single definitions of success. The world is changing fast, and education must lead, not lag.
It is time to reimagine education as a joyful, meaningful, and empowering journey, rooted in human values and enhanced by technology. The future belongs not to the most knowledgeable, but to the most adaptable, curious, and compassionate.
(The author works at the Faculty of Mathematics, Department of General Education SUC, Sharjah, UAE)