My nephew asked me last week why he should study anything if the machine already knows it. He's twelve. Fair question, and I didn't have a clean answer, so I've been chewing on it.
The model knows the answer. It doesn't know if the answer matters. Ask it a bad question and it hands back something confident, well-written, and useless, and it will never tell you the question was bad. Knowing what to ask, and what isn't worth asking, is now the harder skill. The machine doesn't do that part for you.
Then there's judging what it gives you. AI is wrong often enough that you can't outsource trust to it. If you don't know enough to smell when a number is off or a claim is too clean, you'll ship its mistakes as your own. You still need real knowledge in your head, not to race the model on recall, but to catch it.
That is the part school got backwards. For a century we tested the things AI is now best at: remembering, understanding, applying. Those were never the point. They were just the easy things to grade. The skills we waved at and rarely taught, analyzing, evaluating, creating, are exactly the ones left standing.
And someone still has to own the decision. When the model says lay off the team or change the treatment, it doesn't carry what happens next. A person does. You can't hand that to something that feels nothing when it's wrong.
So the answer to my nephew is not "study less." It's study differently. Learn to ask sharp questions. Go deep enough in something real to know when an answer is garbage. Build taste. And find the nerve to decide and stand behind it. The best use of an AI tutor isn't getting the answer faster, it's one that argues back and makes you think harder.
I told him: learn enough to know when the machine is lying to you. He got it faster than most executives I've met.

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