Adult AI productivity gains do not automatically justify the same use for students
Claim
AI uses that help adults work faster may not be appropriate for students, because adults often automate skills they have already developed while students may skip the practice needed to develop them.
Stance
Supported by the source articles as an AI-in-education claim.
Evidence
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Brookings’ AI in K-12 Report: Benefits Remain Theoretical, Harms Are Already Here supports this claim through its discussion of AI use, learning, assessment, wellbeing, or implementation in context.
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Brookings’ AI in K-12 Report: Benefits Remain Theoretical, Harms Are Already Here supports this claim through its discussion of very high relevance for K-12 AI implementation, student learning risks, teacher adoption, institutional reform, and the mismatch between adult productivity narratives and student development.
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A New Direction for Students in an AI World: Prosper, Prepare, Protect supports this claim through its discussion of AI literacy, assessment, implementation, or learning design in context.
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What 81,000 People Told Anthropic supports this claim through its discussion of AI literacy, assessment, implementation, or learning design in context.
Practical implication
Schools should distinguish professional productivity use from developmental learning use when writing AI guidance and classroom policies.