OECD Digital Education Outlook 2026: Why AI Must Remain Learning-First

"72% of lower secondary teachers believe AI can harm academic integrity by letting students pass off work as their own"

The OECD Digital Education Outlook 2026 reminds us that generative AI can support learning, but only when guided by sound teaching principles.

Without that guidance, AI may improve the appearance of student performance without deepening actual learning.
This distinction matters.

A student’s work may become more polished, fluent, and efficient, but we still need to ask whether the student has truly thought, questioned, struggled, verified, and understood the work well enough to explain it in their own words.

This is the danger of the illusion of competence: the product improves, but the learner may not.For Generation Alpha, this is especially important. They will grow up surrounded by instant answers and intelligent tools. But speed is not depth. Fluency is not wisdom. Completion is not formation.

The deeper question is not whether students can use AI. They can, and they will.The real question is what kind of learners they are becoming while using it.

Education must remain learning-first, teacher-guided, and human-centred. AI should support the learning process, not replace the struggle, reflection, discussion, and judgement through which real understanding is formed.

Because education is not merely about producing better answers.

It is about forming better thinkers.

AI Is Changing How We Think. What Is It Changing In Us?

Inspired by Orli Shull’s powerful reflection on “human infrastructure” in the age of AI.

AI is not the enemy.
But there is a risk we should be honest enough to name.

If we allow AI to do too much of our thinking too early, we may slowly weaken the very capacities that make us human: attention, memory, judgement, discernment, agency, and wisdom.

The danger is subtle.
The work may look better.
The answers may sound sharper.
The output may appear more polished.

But beneath the surface, are we still thinking deeply?
Are we still struggling through the difficult parts?
Are we still learning to question, compare, remember, reflect, and decide?
This matters deeply for education, especially for Generation Alpha.

They will grow up surrounded by instant intelligence. Answers will be available before questions are fully formed. Explanations will arrive before confusion has had time to do its work.

But confusion is not always a problem to remove.
Sometimes, it is the beginning of understanding.
The struggle matters.
The pause matters.
The first attempt matters.
The mistake matters.
The moment a student says, “I am not sure yet,” matters.

These are not delays in learning. They are part of how the mind is formed.

AI can be a powerful partner. It can support thinking, widen perspectives, help refine ideas, and make learning more accessible.

But it should not replace the formation of the learner.

If the machine does all the thinking, the human may still produce an answer. But will they know when the answer is wrong?
Will they know what is missing?
Will they know how to act with wisdom?

This is why we need to protect our human infrastructure.
Attention.
Memory.
Ethics.
Reflection.
Judgement.
Empathy.
Agency.
These are not soft skills.
They are survival skills for an AI-shaped world.
The future will not only depend on how intelligent AI becomes.

It will depend on how deeply human we remain while using it.

The AI Risk of losing the skills you’ve mastered over the years

AI is changing how we learn, work, write, think, and make decisions.That is not necessarily a bad thing. But Professor Tan Eng Chye’s recent opinion piece in The Straits Times raises a concern we should take seriously: when AI becomes too convenient, we may slowly lose the very skills we once worked hard to master.

He describes AI as a kind of “GPS for the mind”, useful for quick direction, but dangerous if it weakens our ability to build our own internal map.

This matters deeply in education.Learning is not just about reaching the answer. It is about the struggle that forms understanding. The questioning. The confusion. The revision. The slow process of connecting ideas until something becomes truly our own.

AI can help students produce polished work. But polished work is not always proof of deep thinking.This is the danger of the illusion of competence.

A student may appear capable because the output looks good. But beneath the surface, have they learnt to reason, question, verify, explain, and make responsible judgements?The article also warns about “de-skilling” and “never-skilling”.

De-skilling is when we lose abilities we once had. Never-skilling is when young learners never develop those abilities properly in the first place because AI answers too quickly.

For Generation Alpha, this is especially important.They will not lack access to tools. They will not lack speed. They will not lack information.What they need is the wisdom to use these tools without surrendering their own thinking.

This does not mean we should reject AI. That would be too simple, and unrealistic. AI is here, and it can support learning powerfully when used well.

But the order matters.

Students must still learn to think before they outsource. They must learn to ask before they accept. They must learn to struggle before they generate.

AI should support the mind, not replace its formation.

That is the deeper responsibility before us.

Not to raise students who can simply produce better answers.

But to form young people who can think with clarity, act with responsibility, and use technology with wisdom.

Human first.
AI as a tool, second.

AI May Be Eroding Critical Thinking Skills

A recent TIME article on ChatGPT and learning gave me pause.
(and this includes other AI tools such as Gemini, Grok, Claude, Deepseek etc)

ChatGPT May Be Eroding Critical Thinking Skills

It discussed an MIT Media Lab study where participants wrote essays using ChatGPT, Google Search, or no tool. The findings are still preliminary, so we should not overstate them. But the concern is worth taking seriously.
The group that used ChatGPT showed the lowest brain engagement.
For me, this is not a reason to reject AI.
It is a reason to ask whether we are introducing AI in the right order.

This is where HAIL matters.
Human first.
Tool second.
Think First, AI Second.

The danger is not that Generation Alpha will use AI. They will. It will be part of their world.
The danger is that they may begin with AI before they have learned to sit with a question, form their own thoughts, make mistakes, explain their reasoning, or struggle through uncertainty.
And that struggle matters.It is where judgement is formed.

It is where curiosity grows.
It is where confidence becomes real.
It is where wisdom begins.

AI can give students polished answers. But polished answers do not always mean deep understanding.
Fluency is not wisdom.

Speed is not depth.

A completed task is not always a formed mind.

If AI becomes the get-go instead of the go-to, we risk raising a generation that can produce impressive work, but may not always know how they got there.

HAIL is not about holding students back from technology.It is about helping them grow into the kind of human beings who can use technology with thought, care, responsibility, and discernment.

Generation Alpha will not lack tools.
What they need is the wisdom to use them well.

Better Output Is Not Always Better Learning

Dr. Genevieve Bosma Martínez recently shared an important reflection on AI in education, and it touches on a tension that many of us need to sit with more honestly.
AI can help students produce better work.
That much is clear.

A piece of writing may become more polished. An answer may become more complete. A project may look more refined. In many cases, AI can help students move faster, organise their thoughts better, and improve the quality of what they submit.
But this raises a deeper question.
Does better output always mean deeper learning?

Not necessarily.

This is where the conversation becomes important.In education, we cannot only look at the final answer. We have to look at what happens inside the learner before that answer appears. Did the student understand the problem? Did they wrestle with the question? Did they compare ideas, test assumptions, make mistakes, and try again? Did they learn how to explain their reasoning?

Or did AI simply help them arrive at a better-looking answer before the learning had time to take root?

This is not an argument against AI.
AI has a place in education. It can support teachers. It can help students refine their ideas. It can open access to explanations, examples, feedback, and creative possibilities that were not available in the same way before.

But AI must enter the learning process with care.The concern is not that students are using AI.
The concern is that they may begin to depend on AI before they have developed the human capacities that education is meant to strengthen.

Critical thinking.
Problem solving.
Judgement.
Reflection.
Responsibility.

The ability to sit with uncertainty.

The confidence to think before asking a machine to think for them.These are not small things. They are the foundations of learning itself.If students use AI too early in the process, there is a risk that the visible work improves while the invisible learning weakens. The assignment may look better, but the student may not become more capable.

The answer may be correct, but the reasoning may remain underdeveloped.
That should concern us.

Because the purpose of education is not simply to produce neat answers. It is to form thoughtful human beings.

This is why human-centred AI learning matters.

It reminds us that technology should support the learner, not replace the learner’s thinking. AI should help students extend their understanding, not bypass the struggle that helps understanding grow.

There is a kind of learning that only happens through effort.
Through confusion.
Through discussion.
Through trying to explain something in your own words and realising you do not fully understand it yet.
Through making a mistake and learning why it was wrong.
Through listening to another person’s point of view.
Through slowly building the confidence to say, “This is what I think, and this is why.”

AI can assist this process.
But it should not remove it.

The future of education cannot be measured only by speed, efficiency, or polished outputs. If we are not careful, we may teach students how to generate impressive work without helping them become independent thinkers.
And that would be a poor bargain.In an age where AI can generate almost anything, the role of education becomes even more human, not less.

We must teach students how to question.
How to judge.
How to care.
How to take responsibility for what they create.How to use powerful tools without surrendering their own agency.
AI should be a support tool.
Not the starting point.
Not the substitute.
Not the authority.

The human mind must remain at the centre of learning.
That is the work ahead of us.

Original posting:
The Cognitive Decline of Our Students

Beyond Code: The Human Wisdom Students Need in the Age of AI

Coming across this interview with Jensen Huang recently, he spoke about intelligence in a way that feels especially relevant in this age of AI. 

The “smartest” person, as he suggested, is not simply the one who can code the fastest, programme the best, or master the most technical skills. It is also the person who understands people. Because in the age of AI, intelligence cannot be reduced to technical ability alone. 

A student may know how to use AI. They may know how to write a good prompt. They may even know how to code. 

But if they lack empathy, responsibility, critical thinking, moral judgement, and human awareness, then something essential is still missing. 

Technical skills matter. Of course they do. But they are not enough. We need to help students learn how to think before using AI. 

How to pause before accepting an answer. How to question outputs. How to understand context. How to recognise bias. How to make responsible decisions. How to care about the impact of what they create, submit, or share. 

Most of all, we need to help them remain human while working with increasingly powerful tools. Because the future will not only need people who know how to use AI. It will need people who know how to use AI with wisdom. 

And perhaps that is the real challenge before education now. Not just producing technically capable students, but nurturing young people who can think clearly, understand others deeply, and carry responsibility well.