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In reply to the discussion: Adults Lose Skills to AI. Children Never Build Them. (Psychology Today, 3/22) [View all]Ms. Toad
(38,667 posts)31. I noticed all of these in my daughter 25 years ago - long before AI.
The consequences show up in four observable ways.
AI-dependent students lose the ability to explain their reasoning journey. They can produce proficient work but cannot articulate why they chose particular evidence, what confused them initially, or how they worked through competing interpretations. When questioned, they repeat conclusions but cannot reconstruct the thinking that led them there.
Encountering difficulty becomes anxiety. Students cannot spend 10 minutes wrestling with a challenging problem without external input or seeking assistance.
They lose capacity for extended reasoning chains. Multistep arguments that require Steps 1 through 4 to understand Step 5 become impossible. Complex problems requiring sustained reasoning produce the same collapse patterns that recent research identified in AI systems themselves.
And critically, students are unable to detect their own confusion or knowledge gaps. They'll submit work they cannot defend, express surprise if questioning reveals gaps in their logic, and often cannot remember what caused this confusion in the first place. Self-monitoring of the learning process begins to atrophy entirely.
AI-dependent students lose the ability to explain their reasoning journey. They can produce proficient work but cannot articulate why they chose particular evidence, what confused them initially, or how they worked through competing interpretations. When questioned, they repeat conclusions but cannot reconstruct the thinking that led them there.
Encountering difficulty becomes anxiety. Students cannot spend 10 minutes wrestling with a challenging problem without external input or seeking assistance.
They lose capacity for extended reasoning chains. Multistep arguments that require Steps 1 through 4 to understand Step 5 become impossible. Complex problems requiring sustained reasoning produce the same collapse patterns that recent research identified in AI systems themselves.
And critically, students are unable to detect their own confusion or knowledge gaps. They'll submit work they cannot defend, express surprise if questioning reveals gaps in their logic, and often cannot remember what caused this confusion in the first place. Self-monitoring of the learning process begins to atrophy entirely.
And in the other students I've taught over the years. The path to diminished ability to perform complex tasks was well on its way before AI came along.
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Adults Lose Skills to AI. Children Never Build Them. (Psychology Today, 3/22) [View all]
highplainsdem
Mar 22
OP
Yvw, Sheltie! There is so much pressure and hype to use AI from the AI industry, and now from the Trump regime.
highplainsdem
Mar 22
#4
Its similar to spell check, unless a person takes the effort to turn it off..
BlueWaveNeverEnd
Mar 23
#57
The risks, IMO, are a given and I will never embrace this dysfunctional garbage.
SheltieLover
Mar 22
#32
You're welcome! After seeing that editorial from the U of Pennsylvania student paper yesterday, reading
highplainsdem
Mar 22
#46
For what it's worth, I can't tell time on a sundial. Or use Stonehenge to schedule a harvest.
JustABozoOnThisBus
Mar 22
#18
The reason I was told in elementary school for learning cursive is because it is FASTER
progree
Mar 22
#24
I have the clacky electric portable typewriter with ribbon too. Sadly, no rotary dial phone,
progree
Mar 22
#45
Your first two sentences reveal the tenuous ground the cursive argument stands on.
Ilikepurple
Mar 22
#25
I think it would be interesting to hear your wives anecdotes, but you only mentioned analog clocks in your prior post.
Ilikepurple
Mar 22
#47
A.I. stands for Artificial Insemination. Same thing for AI except no long glove is used.
twodogsbarking
Mar 22
#10
Lol. For us it wasn't just the various caterpillars, stink bugs and other creepy crawlers,
mwmisses4289
Mar 22
#39
Actually, quite a number of the 20 and 30 somethings I know realized they were shortchanged.
mwmisses4289
Mar 22
#30
Big K & R. ALL parents must read this Psychology Today report if they want thinking children to control their futures.
ancianita
Mar 22
#17
IMHO AI should be highly regulated, by gov't policies, parents and ourselves.
Buddyzbuddy
Mar 22
#26
The article is about cognitive atrophy in adults and cognitive foreclosure in children, because of AI
highplainsdem
Mar 22
#49