Last Updated: April 2026
When you use AI every day for everything, and teach kids how to use it, you start thinking about what this means for your own children.
My son watches me work with Claude and ChatGPT constantly. He’s curious in the way only an 8-year-old can be, equal parts wonder and impatience. “How does it know that?” “Will robots do my homework?” “What will my job be when I grow up?”
That last question hit different.
I realized I don’t have a good answer. Not because I’m uninformed, I spend my days immersed in AI’s capabilities and limitations, teaching kids AI literacy and entrepreneurship through live online classes. But because the honest answer is: I genuinely don’t know. And that uncertainty, for a parent who prides himself on having answers, is humbling and a little scary.
So I decided to get what’s in my head onto paper. What does the world of AI actually hold for our little ones? Not the hype. Not the fear-mongering. The real, practical ways their lives will be shaped by technology that didn’t exist when I was learning long division.
How AI Is Already Changing Childhood
I don’t think AI fundamentally transforms childhood right now. But it does make certain things remarkably easier.
Finding answers has become a conversation, not a scavenger hunt. I rarely use Google for research anymore. What used to take me hours now takes minutes. When my son needs to research a book report or learn about Mount Everest, AI chat is his first stop. He asks follow-up questions. He goes deeper. The AI meets him where he is, whether that’s explaining plate tectonics in terms an 8-year-old understands or diving into climbing routes when he wants more detail. The way AI can tailor knowledge to its audience never fails to impress me.
Studying has become interactive. We use AI to quiz him on class topics, to create study guides tailored to what he’s actually struggling with. Instead of flashcards I make at 10 pm, he has a patient tutor who never gets frustrated when he asks the same question three different ways.
Creativity finally matches imagination. For someone like me who’s only creative in my brain, execution has always been the bottleneck. AI changes that for kids. My son can describe an image and see it materialize. He can express ideas visually that he never could have created in Photoshop. The gap between what’s in his head and what he can show the world just got dramatically smaller.
Even bedtime stories have evolved. Hear me out. I have decent storytelling instincts, but AI helps me spin up personalized adventures featuring his favorite characters, set in places he’s curious about, with plot twists calibrated to keep an 8-year-old engaged but not too wound up to sleep. Is it cheating? Maybe. Does he ask for “the AI stories” by name? Absolutely.
What I See When I Teach Kids AI and Entrepreneurship
The kids I teach constantly amaze me. I run live online classes where children learn to build businesses using AI, and the outputs blow me away. They research market opportunities, analyze competitors, design logos and packaging — and I use tools like Lovable to create websites for the ventures they dream up. What used to take months and cost thousands of dollars now happens in minutes.
Not everything AI produces is gold, but it gives kids a visual starting point. When you see your idea brought to life, even imperfectly, it sparks something. Suddenly, the abstract becomes tangible, and creative momentum takes over. One of my students even went on to publish a book on Amazon at age 10.
That’s the power of combining entrepreneurship education with AI literacy for kids. When children learn how to use these tools and why to use them, they don’t just consume technology. They create with it.
What Changes for Kids in 5 Years
By the time my son is 13, AI won’t be a tool he sometimes uses. It will be ambient — woven into everything.
Teachers will assume AI fluency the way mine assumed calculator skills. The students who thrive won’t be the ones who memorize the most facts. They’ll be the ones who know how to ask the right questions, verify information, and synthesize ideas across sources. Critical thinking becomes the skill. AI handles the retrieval.
Homework will look different. Not because kids will cheat, they absolutely will, like we did with Cliff Notes, but because the nature of assignments will have to evolve. “Write a five-paragraph essay” becomes meaningless when AI can generate one in seconds. “Analyze three conflicting perspectives and defend your own position using evidence” becomes essential.
Social dynamics will shift, too. AI companions, AI-generated content, AI-mediated communication — the line between human interaction and AI assistance will blur in ways we can barely imagine. Will his first crush involve an AI intermediary helping him craft the perfect text? Probably.
This is exactly why teaching kids AI literacy now, not later, matters so much. The children who understand how AI works, what it’s good at, and where it falls short will navigate this world with confidence instead of confusion.
What Will College Look Like for Today’s Kids?
This is where my certainty starts to crumble.
By the time my son applies to college, will traditional four-year degrees still carry the same weight? Will admissions offices even exist in their current form, or will AI handle the sorting? Will “college experience” mean something fundamentally different when lectures can be infinitely personalized and delivered on demand?
I suspect the social and networking aspects of university will remain valuable. Learning to live independently, building relationships, and developing an identity separate from your parents, AI can’t replicate those experiences. But the information-transfer function of higher education? That’s already being disrupted. By 2035, the disruption will be complete.
The institutions that survive will be the ones that figure out what humans still need from humans. The rest will become credentialing services at best.
What Will the Job Market Look Like in an AI-Driven World?
Here’s what I tell my son, though I’m not sure I believe it myself: the jobs that will matter most are the ones that require judgment, taste, empathy, and accountability.
AI will be extraordinary at execution. It will write, code, analyze, design, and create at levels that exceed most human capability. But someone still needs to decide what’s worth creating. Someone needs to take responsibility when things go wrong. Someone needs to look another human in the eye and say, “I understand what you’re going through.”
My son’s generation won’t compete with AI. They’ll compete to be the humans that AI empowers. The leverage will be extraordinary for those who figure it out. The displacement will be brutal for those who don’t.
The uncomfortable truth? I can’t tell him which careers will exist. I can only teach him to be adaptable, curious, and comfortable with uncertainty. That feels inadequate. It’s also the best I’ve got.
This is why I’m so passionate about teaching kids entrepreneurship and business skills alongside AI. Entrepreneurial thinking — identifying problems, creating solutions, communicating value — those are the durable skills. They work whether you’re starting a company, leading a team, or navigating a job market that reinvents itself every few years.
The Part That Really Keeps Me Up at Night
Sometime around 2055, my son will be in his late 30s. I’ll be approaching 80.
If I’m lucky, and if the healthcare AI we’re building today delivers on its promise, I’ll still be around. But I’ll need help. The roles will have reversed.
What does AI-assisted elder care look like? An AI companion that monitors my vitals, reminds me to take medications, and detects cognitive decline before I notice it myself? A system that coordinates my care across providers, manages my finances when I can’t, and keeps me connected to family when leaving the house becomes difficult?
My son won’t have to navigate the impossible logistics that my generation faces with aging parents — the phone tag with doctors, the paperwork, the constant worry about what we’re missing. AI will handle the surveillance. It will flag the concerns. It might even handle the routine conversations on days when I’m lonely, but he’s overwhelmed with his own life.
Will that be better? In some ways, absolutely. The peace of mind, the early intervention, the reduced burden — all of that matters.
But will it change what it means to care for a parent? Will my son’s relationship with aging-me be mediated through dashboards and AI summaries? Will he know me in my final years, or will he know what the AI tells him about me?
I don’t have answers. I have questions that feel increasingly urgent.
What I Know For Sure — And What I’m Doing About It
AI will define my son’s life in ways I can barely imagine. His education, his career, his relationships, his role as my caregiver, all of it will be shaped by technology that’s evolving faster than our ability to predict its trajectory.
My job as his parent isn’t to prepare him for a specific future. That future doesn’t exist yet. My job is to prepare him for uncertainty. To teach him to learn continuously, question confidently, and maintain his humanity in a world where the line between human and artificial keeps shifting.
That’s the inheritance I can actually give him. Not a roadmap. A compass.
And honestly? Teaching him that even Dad doesn’t have all the answers might be the most valuable lesson of all.
It’s also why I built Livingston Global Academy. Because every kid deserves the chance to learn how AI works, how businesses are built, and how to communicate their ideas with confidence — before the world demands those skills and they’re playing catch-up. If you’re a parent thinking about how to prepare your child for an AI-driven future, explore our live online classes for kids ages 8–12.
FAQ’s
AI is turning passive learning into active conversation. Instead of scrolling through search results, kids can ask follow-up questions, get explanations matched to their level, and go deeper on topics that genuinely interest them. It’s also making studying more interactive, think personalized quizzing and on-demand tutoring that never loses patience. The shift isn’t dramatic yet, but the direction is unmistakable.
Because by the time today’s young children reach middle school, teachers will assume AI fluency the same way we assumed we could use a calculator. Kids who understand how AI works, what it’s good at, where it falls short, and how to verify what it tells them will navigate school, social life, and eventually careers with confidence. Waiting means playing catch-up in a world that won’t slow down.
The durable skills are judgment, critical thinking, adaptability, and the ability to communicate value. AI will handle execution at extraordinary levels, such as writing, coding, designing, and analyzing. The humans who thrive will be the ones who decide what’s worth creating, take responsibility when things go wrong, and connect with other people in ways machines can’t replicate. Entrepreneurial thinking: spotting problems, building solutions, telling the story sits right at the center of that.
The social and networking dimensions of college: independence, identity, and relationships will likely remain valuable. But the information-delivery function of higher education is already being disrupted, and that disruption will only accelerate. The institutions that survive will be the ones that figure out what humans still need from other humans. The rest risk becoming expensive credentialing services.
Entrepreneurship teaches kids to be comfortable with not knowing the answer yet and to go find it anyway. When children learn to identify problems, research markets, design solutions, and communicate their ideas, they’re building a skill set that works regardless of which specific jobs exist in 10 or 20 years. Pair that with AI literacy, and they’re not just consuming technology. They’re creating with it.
There’s no reason to wait. Kids as young as 8 are already using AI tools with curiosity and creativity. The key is guided exposure, helping them understand that AI is a tool with real strengths and real limitations, not magic. When kids learn early how to ask good questions, evaluate the answers, and think critically about what AI produces, they build habits that compound over time.
Andrew Livingston is the founder of Livingston Global Academy, where kids ages 8–12 learn entrepreneurship, AI literacy, and communication skills through live online classes. He writes about AI, parenting, and the future of education.