By Vinay Maheshwari
We’ve all been there, staring at a textbook at 2 AM, cramming facts that’ll vanish from memory by next week. For generations, this was learning. But something’s shifting in our classrooms, and it’s not what you might expect.
AI in education isn’t about robots teaching kids. It’s about finally making learning personal again, the way a good tutor always could, but now at scale. A student struggles with calculus. In the old model, the teacher explains it once to thirty students and moves on. Now? An AI tutor watches where this particular student gets stuck and adjusts on the fly. Different explanation. New angle. Whatever works. It’s patient, doesn’t judge, and keeps trying until something clicks.
Walk into some history classes today, and you’ll find something remarkable. Students aren’t just reading about India’s partition; they’re standing in a virtual 1947, facing actual dilemmas. They make decisions, then defend them. Why this choice? What are you assuming? Where’s your evidence? The AI pushes back, asks follow-ups, and reveals consequences.
Medical schools do something similar. A student misdiagnoses a virtual patient. Instead of just marking it wrong, the system asks: “You saw these symptoms but ignored those. Walk me through your thinking. What might you have missed?” This reflection builds real expertise. Students learn to catch their own blind spots and question their assumptions.
People worry that AI will make students less creative. I’ve worried too. But what I’m seeing tells a different story. Priya, a journalism student, wanted to write about water shortages in rural Karnataka. She got stuck on technical stuff, how to visualise data, map affected villages, and present complex information. AI tools handled that heavy lifting. She spent her energy where it counted, finding human stories, asking hard questions, writing narratives that made people care. The technology didn’t replace her creativity. It freed it.
In architecture studios, students design buildings and immediately see how they’d handle monsoons or earthquakes. They try ten variations in an afternoon. Or take creative writing, students use AI to generate story openings, then tear them apart. The dialogue is wooden. The plot is predictable. In critiquing AI output, they’re training their editorial eye and learning what makes writing come alive.
Researchers have noticed something interesting: AI tools sharpen critical thinking first, and creativity follows naturally. It’s like learning scales before you improvise. A commerce student might use AI to crunch numbers and spot patterns, but the real value comes when she asks: What does this mean for actual people? What ethical concerns are we missing? The machine provides speed and scale. The human provides judgment and values.
The classroom of tomorrow isn’t humans versus machines. AI won’t teach empathy, ethics, or courage. It won’t show students how to live meaningful lives. That’s human work, and always will be. But AI can help students think more clearly, create more boldly, and learn more effectively.
The best teachers have always known that education isn’t about filling heads with facts. It’s about lighting fires, opening doors, and asking questions that echo for years. AI, used wisely, can help us do more of that. And in a world that desperately needs clear thinkers and creative problem-solvers, that matters more than ever. The technology is here. What we do with it, that’s up to us.
(The author is the Executive Director, Mohan Babu University)
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