By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Norway is, by almost any metric, a profoundly successful
nation. It’s rich, democratic, and relatively free of corruption. It’s not a
socialist country, but fans of a robust welfare state and high taxes see much
to admire in the very progressive Norwegian model. It also benefits from having
the biggest and arguably best-run sovereign wealth fund in the world.
And yet, Norway nearly ruined its children.
In 2016, flush with cash and progressive values, Norway
gave every child in the country, starting at the age of 5, his or her own iPad
or similar digital device. A decade later, young Norwegians now struggle to
read. “Around 500,000 Norwegians, in a population of only 5.6 million, cannot
read a text message or simple instructions,” reports the Times of London. “Of the 65 countries measured for
children’s enjoyment of reading by Pirls (Progress in International Reading
Literacy Study), it comes bottom.”
Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store launched a
program in August to deal with the problem. “Norwegian children used to be
among the best readers in the world,” he said at the time. “But today, 15,000
pupils finish primary school without being able to read properly.”
Now imagine giving every child an AI chatbot to answer
all of their questions.
I am not a catastrophist when it comes to artificial
intelligence. But, given Norway’s experience with iPads—or our own with
smartphones—I worry that the mass introduction of AI, particularly in schools,
will be very bad for children.
As a curmudgeon and as a writer, I hate nearly all of the
clichés about children, even the ones that are accurate. With that caveat, it’s
simply true that children are the future. They will be the next generation of
parents, voters, and citizens. And all of the clichés about how kids learn by
doing are true.
AI removes the doing.
Just as you can’t learn how to ride a bike from reading a
book, you can’t get the benefits of reading by asking AI to read a book for
you. The same holds for math, science, computer programming, and nearly every
other aspect of education.
Our military is the finest and most lethal in the world.
But before you learn how to operate a drone or launch a cyberattack, you still
have to go through basic training.
Education, both at home and at school, is basic training
for civilization.
Americans love technology, but not every technological
advancement is an advancement in every sphere of life. There are machines that
can lift weights, but using a machine to lift weights for you doesn’t count as
exercise and doesn’t build your muscles. Using a machine to think for you is
the route to mental flabbiness.
Fans of AI don’t like this argument. They use terms like
“cognitive shift” and “upskilling.” By removing the drudge
work, smart people can use AI to be smarter and more productive. I think
there’s a lot of merit to this when talking about existing highly skilled
workers. But how did those workers become highly skilled in the first place? By
doing the work.
Educators learned a similar lesson when cheap calculators
became widely available in the 1970s. As you got more advanced, you could use
calculators for certain problems. But first you needed to learn how to do the
basics. You also needed to learn to think mathematically. AI is essentially a
souped-up calculator for nearly all mental tasks. Again, that’s often—but not
always—great for adults who grew up in a pre-AI world.
Which is why I think education should mostly stay in the
pre-AI world. That will be very difficult. It will require more memorization,
more tests in the classroom, and an education establishment that can resist the
seduction of technological fads. If the point of education is to build up
muscle memory for how to think and how to do things, letting kids go home and
have AI give them the answers is not very different, educationally, than
letting kids cheat. For the same reason that having a robot do 50 pushups for
you wouldn’t be acceptable for a physical fitness test, having a robot read a
book for you shouldn’t be acceptable either.
The point of education in the AI era shouldn’t be to
teach kids how to find the answers in the most efficient way possible, but to
equip them to be ready to ask the right kinds of questions, including the
ability to ask an AI chatbot why it gave you the answers it did.
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