{"id":6524,"date":"2026-05-31T12:29:26","date_gmt":"2026-05-31T12:29:26","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.youtubexyoutube.com\/?p=6524"},"modified":"2026-06-05T13:50:52","modified_gmt":"2026-06-05T13:50:52","slug":"a-generation-of-complete-idiots-how-ai-is-changing-our-children","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.youtubexyoutube.com\/index.php\/2026\/05\/31\/a-generation-of-complete-idiots-how-ai-is-changing-our-children\/","title":{"rendered":"A generation of complete idiots? How AI is changing our children"},"content":{"rendered":"
As AI becomes part of everyday learning, educators face a growing challenge: how to use technology without weakening critical thinking<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/p>\n \u201cWould you like me to help with the other problems on the list?\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n That was the sentence a physics teacher recently found at the end of a pupil\u2019s homework assignment. The solution itself was elegant and correct. Unfortunately, it was not produced by the child. It was generated by artificial intelligence and copied so carelessly that the pupil left in the chatbot\u2019s question.<\/p>\n A video on this went viral because it was funny in the uneasy way bad news can be funny. Today\u2019s schoolchildren, it seems, are not only forgetting how to think, but some are forgetting how to cheat properly.<\/p>\n This might have remained another sad school anecdote if President Vladimir Putin had not instructed the State Council at around the same time to prepare proposals for changing federal education standards and incorporating AI into them. So we are no longer discussing a toy, a novelty, or a passing panic \u2013 we\u2019re discussing the future of Russian education.<\/p>\n At first glance, ordinary citizens may think this only concerns teachers and administrators. But the consequences won\u2019t remain inside the classroom. They will shape the way children read, write, argue, remember, and think.<\/p>\n The statistics already tell the story. By 2025, the share of student work written with the help of AI had risen from 17.8% to 24%. Nearly a quarter of presentations, essays, coursework, and even dissertations are now being produced with AI assistance. Among school pupils, the scale is greater still; 29% of Russian pupils admit they use AI tools to do homework, while 23% use them out of boredom, as a substitute for real conversation.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n And those are the ones who admit it.<\/p>\n Teachers don\u2019t need surveys, because we see the problem every day. I once had a pupil who wrote excellent essays at home but consistently failed creative assignments in class. His homework passed anti-plagiarism checks perfectly, and I couldn\u2019t accuse him without proof. The Russian language Unified State Exam settled the matter, as when he was deprived of his digital ghostwriter, he suffered a complete fiasco. His supposed literary ability belonged to a neural network.<\/p>\n If we don\u2019t stop and think seriously about this uncontrolled integration of AI into education, the future looks bleak.<\/p>\n The risks identified by teachers and experts are real. In surveys, 36% of respondents say they fear reduced mental effort will damage children\u2019s development while another 31% worry about the decline of face-to-face interaction. A further 27% fear a collapse in motivation and the rise of catastrophic laziness.<\/p>\n This is the central danger because AI doesn\u2019t merely help a child avoid effort, it can imitate effort. It can produce the appearance of thought and even personality. A bad essay written by a child is still a human document as it contains errors, awkwardness, effort, fear, ambition, and sometimes buried inside, a living voice. A polished AI essay might contain none of this.<\/p>\n IT pioneer Natalya Kaspersky has said we risk raising \u201ca generation of complete idiots.\u201d<\/em> You might not like the harshness of her words, but there\u2019s a grain of truth in them. If a child today cannot even thoughtfully rewrite an answer produced by a machine, what will happen in two or three years? Will our children still write and formulate thoughts of their own, or will they outsource these basic human acts to an algorithm?<\/p>\n Still, pretending we can simply ban AI from the classroom would be childish, and burying your head in the sand never works. Nor does fanatically opposing innovation. Those who try to keep technology out of school entirely will lose, and the only serious answer is to teach children how to use AI intelligently, without surrendering their own minds to it.<\/p>\n