Files
dusa.cz/src/content/blog/en/ai-a-vzdelavani.md
2026-03-11 09:11:13 +01:00

2.3 KiB

title, date, description, image, draft, tags
title date description image draft tags
How AI Is Changing the Way We Learn 2024-11-15 Artificial intelligence is making its way into schools and homes alike. What does this mean for the future of education and the role of teachers? /images/blog/placeholder1.jpg false
AI
Education

Just five years ago, personalised learning powered by artificial intelligence was the stuff of science fiction. Today, primary school pupils have maths explained to them by chatbots, and university students treat AI as their first port of call when writing essays.

Traditional Education Under Pressure

The traditional model of education rested on the assumption that the teacher is the primary source of knowledge. This model worked for centuries — and it still does. AI doesn't destroy it, but it significantly reshapes it. Knowledge is now available instantly, anytime, to anyone. The question is no longer what to learn but how to learn it and why.

What AI Can Do in Education Today

Personalised learning tailored to each student's pace has always been a dream for educators. Today it's technically possible. Tools like Khan Academy or Duolingo use AI to track progress, identify knowledge gaps, and adapt content in real time.

Beyond that, AI helps with:

  • Instant feedback — students don't have to wait for a marked test
  • Translation and language support — access to knowledge without language barriers
  • Generating explanations — a complex concept can be explained ten different ways until one clicks

The Biggest Risk: Thinking on Autopilot

The biggest risk isn't that AI will replace teachers. The biggest risk is that we'll stop developing the ability to think deeply, because the answer is always within reach. When we don't have to wrestle with a problem, the most valuable neural connections never form.

Good teachers have always known this — they let a student struggle for a while before stepping in. AI still lacks this sensitivity.

The Teacher's Role Is Changing, Not Disappearing

The teacher of the future will be less of an information transmitter and more of a guide. They will help students navigate the flood of data, critically evaluate sources, and find their own motivation to learn. These are abilities that AI will complement, but never replace.