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An Ambitious Course on the Future of AI Ends with a Flourish

AI in Education EditorialUpdated June 2, 20261 min readRead source
An Ambitious Course on the Future of AI Ends with a Flourish
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An Ambitious Course on the Future of AI Ends with a Flourish  Stanford Graduate School of Business

Analysis & Perspectives

People Also Ask

What will AI in education look like in 10 years?
In the next decade, AI in education is expected to deliver genuinely personalized learning pathways for every student, automate significant teacher administrative work, provide real-time coaching for both students and teachers, and enable new assessment formats that evaluate competency through AI-monitored project work rather than standardized tests.
Will AI make education more equitable?
AI has the potential to democratize access to high-quality tutoring and personalized learning for students regardless of family income. However, equity gains depend on ensuring reliable internet access, preventing AI tools from perpetuating biases present in training data, and avoiding a two-tiered system where premium AI tools are only available in wealthy districts.
What AI education developments are closest to mainstream adoption?
AI writing feedback tools, adaptive math and reading platforms, and AI-generated lesson planning tools are already mainstream in many districts. AI-powered early-alert systems and automated differentiation are in rapid expansion. AI-led one-on-one tutoring at K-12 scale is the next frontier, with pilots in several US states and across Asia showing early promise.
How will the role of teachers change as AI advances?
As AI takes over routine instruction, assessment, and content delivery, teachers will focus increasingly on mentorship, motivation, social-emotional learning facilitation, creative problem-solving, and the professional judgment calls that AI cannot reliably make. This shift is expected to elevate the professional status of teaching and require stronger human-centered skills.