
AI’s Quiet Infiltration of Classrooms and Therapy Rooms Demands a New Human Assertiveness
From Jakarta to São Paulo, the real risk is not that artificial intelligence makes mistakes, but that humans stop questioning its answers.
The most consequential shift in the global adoption of artificial intelligence is not the scale of investment or the speed of deployment, but a creeping willingness to outsource human judgment to machines. Across continents, a pattern is emerging: students are turning to chatbots to write their essays, lovelorn adults are seeking relationship advice from algorithms, and mental health patients are supplementing professional therapy with AI-generated diagnoses. Viewed from London, the danger is less about technological fallibility than about a quiet abdication of critical thought. As one analysis from West Africa cautions, the greatest risk with AI may not be what it gets wrong, but what happens when humans stop scrutinising its answers.
In education systems from Southeast Asia to Latin America, the tension is acute. Indonesian policymakers and technology executives argue that schools must move beyond simply teaching students how to use AI and instead equip them to evaluate its outputs with scepticism. A senior Lenovo executive in Jakarta recently stressed that teachers must frame AI as an assistant, not a substitute. In Argentina, a university literature experiment produced an unsettling result: students and their professor found that AI-generated personal narratives were often stylistically superior to human-written ones, raising uncomfortable questions about the purpose of writing instruction. The Brazilian consulting sector, meanwhile, is booming as companies scramble to integrate AI not just as a tool but as a structural force, with 42% of firms already using it for deep organisational change—well above the global average.
Perhaps nowhere is the blurring of boundaries more intimate than in mental health and personal life. An American Psychological Association survey found that over three-quarters of psychologists report their patients discuss AI in therapy, with many using chatbots for supplementary support, self-diagnosis, or even to improve friendships and romantic relationships. In Indonesia, the phenomenon has become a mainstream trend: growing numbers of people now confide in AI chatbots about heartbreak and dating dilemmas, favouring the 24-hour availability of a non-judgmental algorithm over a trusted friend. Italian psychologists are observing the same pattern, noting that patients increasingly arrive at sessions with advice already received from a machine. This shift raises profound ethical questions about dependency, privacy, and the erosion of human connection.
Africa offers a counter-narrative that is both pragmatic and ambitious. Rather than merely reacting to AI’s encroachment, a generation of young entrepreneurs and policymakers is working to shape the technology on their own terms. Initiatives linked to the African Union’s Agenda 2063 and its Digital Transformation Strategy emphasise that youth must become creators, regulators, and ethical thinkers, not passive consumers of imported systems. In Nigeria and Ghana, training programmes have equipped over a hundred young Africans with skills in AI, UI/UX design, and data literacy. Meanwhile, six winning startups from a pan-African accelerator programme are arriving in Italy this month, showcasing innovations in digital health, artificial intelligence, and ecological transition—a deliberate rebuttal to outdated stereotypes of a continent dependent on aid.
The convergence of these trends points to a single imperative: the cultivation of critical digital literacy as a core competency for the 21st century. Whether in Indonesian Islamic boarding schools, where leaders are urging santri to master AI, or in Brazilian boardrooms where executives are learning that digital transformation demands fewer systems and more human connection, the message is consistent. The technology will continue to advance, but the defining variable remains human agency. The societies that thrive will be those that teach their citizens not just to prompt the machine, but to interrogate it.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
Africa's youth must move beyond being passive consumers of imported AI and instead become active shapers of the continent's digital future. Training initiatives are equipping young people with practical skills, but the deeper imperative is to align with Agenda 2063 and build sovereign digital capabilities. The rise of AI brings both opportunity and risk of dependency, making strategic digital literacy an urgent leadership challenge.
Schools and religious institutions are being called upon to produce a digitally intelligent generation that can navigate the flood of information and cyber threats wisely. Islamic boarding schools are urged to equip students with AI and digital skills, blending technological mastery with moral and critical thinking. The transformation of the workplace demands that education systems strengthen competencies so that young people are not just AI users but discerning, responsible actors.
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