What Happens When There May Not Be Enough Jobs To Go Around Because of AI And Automation?
Plus, a New Rule Promises Big Changes for Students with Disabilities
In Forbes, Cathy Rubin asks what happens when there may not be enough jobs to go around because of automation and AI? The key word is “may”—because I’m not sure I share that view. But either way, in her column, Rubin explored whether the possibility demands a fundamental reimagining of education and curriculum design.
Rubin interviewed me along with Nick Bostrom, Howard Gardner, Andrew Hargreaves, and Charles Fadel, to get our takes.
I focused on how to integrate AI tools into the current education system most immediately. “The lowest risk and most immediate opportunity for impact is for AI tools to support teachers in everything from helping them lesson plan to creating more personalized learning opportunities for students in different places in their learning to helping them assess student work,” I said. Supporting teachers is crucial in my mind, because experts can mitigate AI's occasional hallucinations, which reduces the likelihood of misleading students. Those mistakes aren’t innocent ones, as they can hurt student confidence and self-efficacy. This is among the things that makes the use of AI in education different from using it in movie or shopping recommendations in services like Netflix and Amazon.
I also weighed in on the potential benefits and challenges of implementing personalized tutorial systems using AI in classrooms. “Tutoring is one of the biggest hypes and excitements around AI. AI tutors are great when there’s not another option—more affordable, scalable, and accessible. But not as good as a human tutor, particularly a human tutor with AI at their disposal,” I said. Classic disruptive innovation there—and something to keep an eye on over time.
Read the full piece here and let me know your take.
Too Few Are Talking about a Change that Could Have a Big Impact on Districts, Public Colleges, and Digital Curriculum Providers
With a hat tip to long-time reader Raymond Rose, who has long focused on creating digital materials that serve all students well—particularly those with different disabilities—“a newly issued federal rule to ensure web content and mobile apps are accessible for people with disabilities will require public K-12 and higher education institutions to do a thorough inventory of their digital materials to make sure they are in compliance,” as this article in K–12 Dive details.
On April 24th, the U.S. Department of Justice updated its regulations for Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act to require all “state and local governments to verify that their web content — including mobile apps and social media postings — is accessible for those with vision, hearing, cognitive and manual dexterity disabilities.”
Mary Rice, associate professor of literacy at the University of New Mexico, told K–12 Dive that all school districts should do an inventory of their digital materials to prepare for the change, which will take effect at different times depending on size of the region where the district or higher education institution is located.
“If a school district is located in a county or city with a population of 50,000 or more, it must comply by April 24, 2026. Public state universities would also have an April 24, 2026, compliance deadline, as they are considered a state entity. However, a county community college or K-12 school district in the same state located in a county or city with 49,999 or fewer residents would have a later compliance deadline of April 26, 2027. Special district governments — such as independent school districts — also must comply by April 26, 2027.”
This is a rule that advocacy groups for student with disabilities have long wanted. And it should have a significant ripple effect into education publishers.
Rice told K–12 Dive: “This is going to throw a real wrench into Teachers Pay Teachers and other stuff like that.”
According to the Software and Information Industry Association, which represents software and digital content providers, the Justice Department’s “estimates to conform to the new requirements are $1.134 billion for K–12 classroom courses and $5.5 billion for postsecondary courses” (as reported in this K–12 Dive article).
Not small in other words. And according to my sources, something unlikely to be impacted by the recent Chevron decision. The rules could also mean a sea change in accessibility. Something worth paying attention to.
As always, thank you for reading, writing, and listening.