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The real imposter is the system: Rethinking education in the age of GenAI

For decades, we’ve treated education as the ultimate equaliser.

Study hard. Get certified. Climb the ladder.

That formula powered the industrial economy and then the early knowledge economy. Degrees signalled competence. Credentials signalled readiness. Access to elite institutions signalled advantage.

Then GenAI arrived.

And quietly, without protest, it collapsed the scarcity model that education was built upon.

Today, anyone with a prompt can access legal reasoning, financial modelling, medical summaries, code scaffolding, strategic frameworks, and global research. The gates are no longer guarded.

This raises a difficult question: If AI has access to almost all codified knowledge — and most people now do too — what exactly is the education system optimising for?

The original purpose of education

Modern education systems were designed for three primary objectives:

  • Standardisation of knowledge
  • Industrial workforce readiness
  • Credential-based sorting

It rewarded:

  • Memorisation
  • Compliance
  • Accuracy within structured evaluation
  • Linear problem-solving

In the industrial era, this worked. Fact recall was valuable. Access to information was limited. Standardisation ensured predictable output.

But in the GenAI era, memorisation is automated. Information retrieval is instant.

Structured reasoning can be generated in seconds. If the value of knowledge used to lie in having it, today the value lies in knowing what to do with it.

And this distinction exposes the cracks in the current system.

When AI has all the answers

GenAI does not experience impostor syndrome. It doesn’t doubt its competence. It doesn’t gatekeep information. It doesn’t fear being “found out.”

It simply accesses and synthesises.

Ironically, humans — who built the education system — are now the ones experiencing inadequacy. Because we were trained in scarcity.

Scarcity of:

  • Access
  • Tools
  • Elite networks
  • Research
  • Mentorship

AI operates in abundance.

So the question shifts from: “Can you recall the answer?” to “Can you ask the better question?”

And this is where the current education model shows its limits.

Also Read: Gender gap in GenAI skills is narrowing, but progress remains uneven, Coursera finds

The hidden limitation: Education rewards convergence

Most education systems reward convergence thinking:

  • Find the correct answer
  • Follow the expected method
  • Produce the accepted framework

But GenAI excels at convergence.

What it struggles with — and where human advantage lies — is divergence:

  • Challenging premises
  • Identifying unseen patterns
  • Questioning assumptions
  • Connecting disciplines in novel ways
  • Acting with contextual judgment

Our education systems largely assess answers. The future economy will reward judgment. Those are not the same.

Education as a signalling mechanism is weakening

Degrees once signalled:

  • Rigor
  • Persistence
  • Domain expertise
  • Access to curated knowledge

But when AI can:

  • Summarise an MBA textbook
  • Draft a legal memo
  • Generate a financial model
  • Write production-ready code

Then the credential alone becomes insufficient. Not irrelevant — but insufficient.

What differentiates tomorrow’s knowledge worker is no longer: “How much you know.”

It becomes:

“How deeply you understand.”

“How effectively you apply.”

“How clearly you decide.”

Education, in its current form, does not consistently measure these dimensions.

The new divide: Curiosity vs compliance

GenAI does something profound. It removes knowledge access as a structural advantage.

But it introduces a new differentiator: curiosity.

Two individuals can access the same AI.

Only one chooses to:

  • Probe deeper
  • Refine prompts
  • Challenge outputs
  • Cross-check assumptions
  • Explore adjacent domains

Education traditionally rewarded compliance:

  • Follow curriculum.
  • Pass exam.
  • Meet benchmark.

The new economy rewards inquiry:

  • What else?
  • Why not?
  • What’s missing?
  • What’s next?

This is not a minor adjustment. It’s a systemic shift.

Also Read: GenAI in lending: Faster approvals, smarter risks, and personalised credit

What education must evolve into

If we are serious about preparing a generation of true knowledge workers, education must shift across five structural dimensions.

  • From memorisation → Meta-learning

Teach students:

  • How to learn
  • How to unlearn
  • How to validate AI outputs
  • How to interrogate sources

AI can retrieve answers. Humans must validate relevance.

  • From siloed disciplines → Interdisciplinary synthesis

Real-world problems do not come neatly packaged:

  • Climate intersects with finance.
  • Healthcare intersects with data ethics.
  • Supply chains intersect with geopolitics.

True knowledge workers will be synthesisers, not specialists confined within narrow lanes.

  • From fixed curriculum → Dynamic learning models

Curricula often lag the industry by years.

In a world where AI models update in months, static syllabi become outdated quickly.

Education must become:

  • Modular
  • Continuous
  • Adaptive
  • Stackable

Learning cannot end at graduation.

  • From exams → Applied judgment

Assessment should increasingly measure:

  • Scenario reasoning
  • Ethical trade-offs
  • Decision framing
  • Risk calibration

The world does not grade people on multiple-choice questions. It rewards decision quality under uncertainty.

  • From credential prestige → Portfolio evidence

Future differentiation will likely come from:

  • Projects
  • Problem-solving artifacts
  • Real-world experimentation
  • Public thinking

What you build may matter more than where you studied. It implies application.

The knowledge worker of the new age

Peter Drucker popularised the term “knowledge worker” decades ago.

But GenAI forces us to redefine it.

A true knowledge worker in the AI era:

  • Does not compete on access
  • Does not compete on recall
  • Does not compete on surface frameworks

Instead, they compete on:

  • Depth
  • Context
  • Original framing
  • Decision velocity
  • Ethical clarity
  • Strategic foresight

Education systems must therefore cultivate:

  • Systems thinking
  • Probabilistic reasoning
  • Bias awareness
  • Creativity under constraint
  • Communication clarity
  • Cross-domain fluency

These are not exam-friendly traits. But they are future-critical capabilities.

Talent vs experience in an AI-accelerated world

AI compresses learning curves.

A junior analyst can produce outputs once reserved for senior professionals.

An executive can independently generate strategy drafts without layers of support.

So, where does experience fit?

Experience now becomes:

  • Pattern recognition under ambiguity
  • Judgment calibrated by lived consequence
  • Crisis-tested decision making
  • Ethical discernment

Talent becomes:

  • Speed of synthesis
  • Intellectual curiosity
  • Cross-domain integration
  • Learning agility

Education should nurture both.

But today, it often privileges standardised performance over adaptive capability.

Also Read: The use of GenAI is turning innocent employees into insider threats: Here’s how to fix it

The structural recalibration we need

If we continue educating for yesterday’s scarcity economy, we will produce graduates optimised for irrelevance.

If instead we redesign education for:

  • Abundance of information
  • AI-augmented productivity
  • Continuous reinvention
  • Portfolio-based credibility
  • Judgment-based differentiation

Then we create a generation that does not fear AI — but compounds with it.

The real imposter is not the human.

It is the outdated system that measures humans by metrics AI can outperform.

In conclusion

GenAI is not replacing education. It is exposing what education was truly built to optimise.

The future knowledge worker will not win by competing with AI on answers.

They will win by:

  • Asking sharper questions
  • Integrating broader perspectives
  • Exercising wiser judgment
  • Pursuing depth relentlessly
  • Exploring “what’s next” before it becomes obvious

Education must therefore evolve from a delivery system of knowledge into a training ground for discernment.

In a world where AI knows almost everything, the true advantage belongs to those who know what matters.

And that begins with rethinking how we educate — not just what we teach.

This article is Part 4 of a four-part series on “Redefining Knowledge Work: AI, Ownership, and the Future of Value.” Explore the rest of the series: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3.

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