By Yashi Bairagi
The artificial intelligence era has rewritten the script on traditional education. Last year, when a student asked Google Deep Mind’s CEO Demis Hassabis in a lecture in Cambridge, about good career options in our fast-accelerated world, his response was unexpected. He essentially threw his hands up, hinting that the true speed of AI makes it almost impossible to pin down a definitive answer. The future of work is entirely up in the air so is the right career option.
Right now, students are caught in a relentless race against time. By the time someone buckles down to learn and master a new field—whether it’s generative AI or software coding—that very skill is likely to bite the dust or become largely redundant within a year or two, thanks to emergence and good work done by AI Agents. Consequently, the classic four-year engineering degree is rapidly losing its edge. Colleges hype up specific subjects every year, but by the time a student finally graduates, autonomous AI agents have already caught up. The once-valuable entry-level skills these young professionals bring to the table are suddenly worth pennies.
So, how do we stay ahead of the curve? We can no longer afford to stick to the status quo. Instead of churning out graduates with run-of-the-mill technical abilities, we need to aim much higher and bolder. We must equip our kids with high-end, complex problem-solving skills and throw them into ambitious projects right off the bat, keeping the goal of 1 day getting the Thiel Fellowship, $750 billion market value providing fellowship, it is even higher then Y Combinator. If we want them to hit the ground running in an automated world, they need to focus on visionary thinking and strategy—the domains where human ingenuity still reigns supreme, or else Humans will be worthless while machines will produce great works.
To pull this off, we must tackle the root of the issue: the school system. Waiting until college to teach high-level adaptability is simply too late. We need to target the primary and secondary education frontiers with all our energy and focus. Teenagers possess immense, untapped creativity and boundless willpower. If we channel that raw energy early on, we can foster a generation of bold architects rather than mere task-doers.
Education should no longer be about memorizing syntax or following step-by-step formulas. It’s time to shake things up. By nurturing high-level ambition during their formative years, we can ensure our youth aren’t just trying to keep their heads above water, but are actually steering the ship into the future. As an assistant professor myself, I have watched all these happening at an unfathomable pace, and students falling behind so I want all the school going children to focus on skills and projects before it’s too late.
























