Kids Weren't Prepared for Social Media. Will AI Be Better?
AI is changing how young people learn, create, and solve problems.
Restriction without education leaves kids unprepared for digital life.
Kids need help understanding AI’s strengths and weaknesses, not just avoiding the tools.
Digital literacy builds judgment and critical thinking through practice.
We didn’t prepare kids for social media. Instead, we argued about screen time and whether social media is "good or bad.” We treated mobile phones and social media as if they were interchangeable. We got scared and overlooked what our kids really need: the preparation to handle the digital world they are growing up in.
The problem is not the tools. We left most kids to figure out this new environment on their own. We gave them access to powerful systems without teaching them how those systems worked, what they rewarded, or how to think critically about what they were seeing and sharing.
Now AI is here, and it is developing at a pace that makes social media look slow by comparison. Its implications reach far beyond distraction and social comparison. AI is already reshaping how students search, write, create, solve problems, and even seek companionship. Are we going to make the same mistake again?
We will if we ask, “How do we protect kids from AI?” when we should be asking, “What do kids need to understand so they can safely navigate an AI‑saturated world?” Protection without preparation is an illusion. The minute the restrictions disappear, the kids are on their own.
Right now, we’re preoccupied with picking up pennies in front of a steamroller. Bans, filters, and one‑off rules feel protective but do........
