An illustrated guide to resisting "AI is inevitable" in education
Enough, enough, enough
1. Ask the AI-in-education enthusiast to clarify their premise.
(Slide created by Jane Rosenzweig, Director of Harvard College Writing Center)
2. Ask the AI-in-education enthusiast if they are familiar with recent research indicating that generative AI leads to widespread “cognitive surrender.”
Shot:
“Conceptually distinct from cognitive offloading, which involves strategically outsourcing a discrete task to an external tool (e.g., using a calculator), cognitive surrender represents a deeper abdication of critical evaluation, where the user relinquishes cognitive control and adopts the AI’s judgment as their own….
Across our studies, we observe that when System 3 [i.e., AI] was available, people readily engaged it and frequently adopted its answers. This shift reflects a reallocation of cognitive control rather than mere effort saving. System 3’s fluent, confident outputs are treated as epistemically authoritative, lowering the threshold for scrutiny and attenuating the metacognitive signals that would ordinarily route a response to deliberation. In the case of cognitive surrender, there is a shift in the locus of control, with an external system (System 3) occupying the default position.”
(Paper here https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=6097646, with my emphasis)
Chaser:
(Paper https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.01106, BlueSky thread here)
3. If you feel the need to pile on with research, consider citing to this recent report from Stanford showing the complete lack of empirical research to support the use of AI in education.
“Research on how AI impacts K-12 students and educators is still extremely limited.
“As of October 2025 the AI Hub for Education Research Repository contained over 800 academic papers relevant to AI in K-12 education. Our review found that only a small subset (20 papers) produce strong causal evidence. Causal evidence provides the strongest basis for estimating how a tool impacts students and educators. The current causal research is still very limited: we did not identify any high-quality causal studies in K-12 settings in the U.S. for students and very few for teachers.
Students
Immediate gains with access: AI tools significantly improve student performance on math practice, programming projects, and writing tasks while students have active access to the technology.
Short-term boost, uncertain transfer: AI improves performance with access but when assessed independently without AI support, effects are mixed.
Easier doesn’t mean better: AI tools can alleviate students’ cognitive burden and foster positive experiences in learning, but can be at the expense of deeper thinking.
Pedagogical design matters: Tools designed with pedagogical guardrails (such as AI chatbots for tutoring that provide step-by-step reasoning instead of direct answers) show more promise than general purpose AI tools.
(source, my emphasis added re lack of causal evidence)
4. Ask the AI-in-education enthusiast if they are familiar with any of the recent efforts led by students pushing back hard on the intrusion of AI into their education.
a. In Pennsylvania
“Through its countless new programs and AI-centered events, Penn has positioned AI as an inescapable future that we all must accept in order to achieve success. There is no doubt that AI is part of the current occupational landscape, and we will certainly encounter it long after we graduate. Nevertheless, we attend this institution to develop hard skills, question the world around us, solve problems, produce new ideas, and the ability to think for ourselves. With the University forcing AI into our learning every chance it gets, do we end up gaining knowledge or cheat codes?
“The irony is that as Penn pours endless money and energy into AI advancement in its attempt to get ahead, the University is only quickening its own demise. AI cannot coexist with education — it can only degrade it. As technology advances and workers are replaced by machines, schools are some of the only places we have left to explore and wrestle with human thought. With our own university leading the charge, AI is now corrupting those few sacred spaces and leaving us with nowhere to engage in true scholarship.”
(Source, with my emphasis added)
b. In Colorado
“In an online survey conducted by Flynn Zook, a CU Denver student, nearly 300 respondents weighed in on the agreement. Fewer than 10 expressed clear support, while a small number said they were undecided. Many respondents raised concerns about environmental impact, intellectual property and the potential use of tuition dollars to fund the initiative.” (Story link)
c. In Ohio
(Source)
5. Politely point out that Sal Khan, perhaps the most prominent advocate for the capacity of AI to “revolutionize“ education, has recently changed his tune.
“‘For a lot of students, it was a non-event,’ Khan told me recently about his eponymous chatbot, Khanmigo. ‘They just didn’t use it much.’”
“Kristen Musall, a geometry teacher at Hobart High, gave Khanmigo a try when it first rolled out. Musall appreciated its encouraging, teacher-like tone, but she found that students didn’t really care for the bot….Musall no longer uses Khanmigo in her class. She says there’s been more enthusiasm for the product among administrators than teachers in her school.
“Kristen DiCerbo, the organization’s chief learning officer, said AI can only respond to students based on what they ask. And it turns out, she said, ‘Students aren’t great at asking questions well.’”
(From Chalkbeat’s Matt Barnum)
6. Direct the AI-in-education enthusiast to the PureGenius website to see if they get the joke.
(source; feel the future)
7. Ask the AI-in-education enthusiast if they are familiar with the broader pushback against the intrusion of education technology into schools led by educators and parents.
“McPherson Middle School, about an hour’s drive from Wichita, is at the forefront of a new tech backlash spreading in education: Chromebook remorse.
“Schools in North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and Michigan that once bought devices for each student are now re-evaluating heavy classroom technology use.
“Now children’s groups and educators concerned about screen time are turning their attention to school-issued laptops and learning apps. Parents are flocking to support efforts, like Schools Beyond Screens and the Distraction-Free Schools Policy Project, to vet and limit school tech.
“Sarah Garcia, also 13, said spending less time online had prompted students to talk more. ‘Since we don’t have our Chromebooks in front of our face,” she said, “most people now interact with their, like, peers and stuff.’”
(source)
8. Gently remind the AI-in-education enthusiast that we have evidence in our own lifetime that highly addictive products marketed to children that cause serious harm are something we can address through policy and norms.
(source)
9. If the AI-in-education enthusiast has the audacity to cite f***ing AlphaSchool as counterexample and “proof of what’s possible,” liberally reference any or all the myriad reasons this is one of the most embarrassing possible arguments they could make.
“Former Alpha School employees told me that the company’s increasing reliance on generative AI in every aspect of its operation, as well as the constant monitoring and tracking of every student’s mouse movements, is making students anxious and does not always provide the quality of education Alpha School advertises to parents.
““All educational content is obsolete. Every textbook, every lesson plan, every test, all of it is obsolete because gen AI is going to be able to deliver a personalized lesson just for you,’ Joe Liemandt, Alpha School’s ‘principal’ and the founder of Trilogy, the company that owns many of the apps used by Alpha School, said in a podcast interview published last year.
“When a student requires help with additional questions, the chatbot fails to identify which specific question is being addressed,’ an internal Alpha School document outlining issues with AlphaRead says. ‘Accuracy of the content provided by the [AI] tutor is a concern. There are instances where it not only delivers incorrect answers but also provides convincing yet flawed justifications. Despite raising multiple queries about a particular answer, the chatbot erroneously confirmed an incorrect option as correct.”
(source)
From teacher Michael Pershan:
“Alpha is not trying to provide the best, most ambitious math or ELA education possible according to conventional understandings of that term. If they were, they’d keep studying ELA/math in the afternoon. Instead, their goal is to minimize the time spent on core academics while maximizing skills.
“This is unusual! This is not what most schools are trying to do!
“What’s most novel about Alpha School and Math Academy is their fundamental orientation towards K-12 schooling. The goal, quite expressly, is to minimize it and move on. Move on to what?”
(source)
From teacher Dylan Kane:
[Dylan explains how AlphaSchool measures its “success” by demonstrating how much faster students improve on the NWEA MAP, a mediocre-to-shitty assessment of student learning, compared to national average of students. In 2024-2025, using mediocre-to-shitty ed-tech product iXL, AlphaSchool students outgained the national average by 2.6x. Dylan reports on how students are doing this year using AI: on math, 2.5x, and on reading 2.8x]
“Again, let’s take these numbers at face value for a minute. Last year, the program was mostly iXL + a culture laser-focused on motivating students. There was little to no generative AI involved. This year, Alpha School has overhauled their academics, released their own platform, and incorporated generative AI throughout. They are finally doing what they say they are doing: AI-driven schooling. And the results are…more or less the same?
“This is completely fascinating to me. 100 million dollars, tons of hype on the internet, grand claims about the future of education. And the results haven’t budged from bribing kids to try hard on iXL?”
(source)
10. If all else fails, try appealing to the poetry of human existence. But don’t hold your breath.
(Source)
Our days are indeed precious on this earth. Today, the The New York Times published a long story about what happened to my father due to his reliance on AI for medical guidance. I am very grateful to reporter Teddy Rosenbluth for sharing his story with the world, and to all of you for your enduring support.






















I am the student from CU Denver that you referenced in this article and I just want to say thank you for compiling this!! It's a really useful breakdown for us to keep in mind going forward with our fight :)
Hadn't heard the "cognitive surrender" idea before, at least in relation to "cognitive offloading." It's doing some real work that "offloading" can't. Offloading sounds so neutral... as in it just described where the work went without actually labeling something as lost. "Surrender" does a nice job of being clear about it - the student is handing over the act of judgement and reason. That sounds more harmful and probably not something easily seen in any kind of assessment activity.
What's interesting about it, too, is that the surrender seems to happen before the prompt is even typed. It's a "why bother thinking?" moment. And that kind of resonates with the whole "AI is inevitable" movement (which, I don't know - I partly buy into). Schools are relinquishing their judgement about the act of learning because the tech has arrived with enough confidence to make scrutiny feel useless.
Also, the AlphaSchool hype is crazy to me, especially when three minutes on google reveals the insanity.