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India Can Reinvent Education With AI

Hindustan Times Haryana

|

April 11, 2025

If the country can empower its children to become fluent in the language of AI, to master these tools instead of fearing them, then it will gain a decisive competitive edge

- Vivek Wadhwa

A silent revolution is unfolding in classrooms. Students are no longer just Googling answers—they are collaborating with Artificial Intelligence (AI). They are co-writing essays with ChatGPT, generating lab reports in seconds, solving math problems through conversation, and even using AI to communicate with their teachers. This is happening now—in real time, in real classrooms, all over the world.

And yet, the most common response from educational institutions has been fear. Schools are banning AI tools. Universities are implementing harsh penalties. Administrators are doubling down on surveillance technologies. In the U.S., some teachers are being pressured, or even threatened, for raising concerns about outdated curricula or experimenting with AI in their classrooms. Instead of being supported for trying to adapt, they are being told to toe the line. It is a global backlash driven not by reason, but by panic.

This isn't just a missed opportunity—it is a fundamental misunderstanding of what's coming.

Every disruptive technology in education has followed the same trajectory: rejection, resistance, then reluctant acceptance. Calculators were once condemned. Computers were banned from exam halls. The internet was feared. Eventually, all of them became indispensable. AI is following the same path, but with much more speed and scale. And what makes it different is that it doesn't just change how students learn—it changes what learning means.

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