I know a lot of readers will disagree with this, and the timeline feels aggressive (the future always arrives more slowly than pundits expect) but I think the overall premise is sound: "The concept of a tipping point in education - where AI surpasses traditional schools as the dominant learning medium - is increasingly plausible based on current trends, technological advancements, and expert analyses." That doesn't mean universities will disappear: people with privilege still need an environment where they can develop connections and common values. But even in universities, AI seems likely to play an increasing role in actual teaching and learning. "Regulatory hurdles, ethical concerns, and cultural resistance could delay it. As Jim Shimabukuro (for some reason assisted by Grok and not a good AI) says, "The genie is out, though - once parents see AI-educated kids outperforming peers, the shift could accelerate rapidly."
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