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Two ways to work with this, depending on who you are.

For educators

For Educators: Reimagining Learning

Sir Ken Robinson argued that education should nurture creativity, individuality, and resilience. AI makes that argument harder to ignore. In practice, it means:

Creativity is as important as literacy. AI makes this more true, not less.

Divergent thinking, the ability to generate multiple solutions, matters more when one answer is always available.

Different types of intelligence (linguistic, spatial, musical, kinesthetic, interpersonal) all matter more when AI handles the analytical basics.

Teachers should be facilitators and mentors, not information transmitters. AI can transmit. Humans inspire.

Real-world problems don't respect subject boundaries. Interdisciplinary learning prepares students for how the world actually works.

For educators

The same four intelligences, adapted for the classroom

One question per intelligence, built for a class of students rather than one child at home.

01

Rational

“What's one answer AI gave you today that you didn't check before using it?”

Trains students to treat AI output as a draft to verify, not a finished answer.

02

Embodied

“What did you work out today before checking AI or a search engine?”

Trains students to notice when they solved something using their own effort first.

03

Relational

“Who explained something to you today in a way AI couldn't have?”

Trains students to notice what a real explanation gives them that an AI answer does not.

04

Existential

“If AI could do this assignment perfectly, what would still be worth doing yourself?”

Trains students to locate the purpose of the work, not just the output.