Stop teaching kids skills they won’t need in 10 years—how I’m raising robot-proof children
Everyone talks about the rise of AI and the need for soft skills. Yet, companies still hire based on elite degrees, and schools still teach to the test. We are raising children to follow rules and memorize answers, preparing them for jobs that may no longer exist. We are leaving them unready for a world that rewards creativity, curiosity, and complex problem-solving.
As a neuroscientist and entrepreneur, I have spent my career asking a simple question: **What skills will matter when AI can generate answers and automate cognitive work?**
The answer requires a foundational shift in how we view development—moving from knowledge transmission to capacity-building. If you want your children to have an advantage in the age of automation, here is how to raise them to be robot-proof.
1. Institute the 'Failure Resume.'
In my research, a consistent pattern emerges: high achievers distinguish themselves by their willingness to be wrong. My models, trained on thousands of learners, show that exploration and even failure predict deep learning better than repeating correct answers.
Yet, our education system is obsessed with correctness. It trains this instinct out of children, teaching them that failure reflects their worth rather than fueling their growth.
**What this is:**
The Failure Resume is a living document and a family ritual where you actively record and celebrate mistakes. It serves as explicit evidence that the hard work of being wrong pays off, feeding into a learner's resilience and ability to tackle open-ended problems.
**For parents:**
Once a month at dinner, go around the table and have everyone (including you) add one failure to their resume. A missed goal in soccer, a bombed test, a project at work that went sideways.
The key is the reframe. Don't ask, "What did you fail at?" Ask, **"What did you try that was hard? What did you learn from it?"** Normalize the act of stretching beyond one's abilities and tie that effort to the rewards of growth.
My own Failure Resume includes a failed startup, a period of homelessness, and the time I accidentally convinced the Secret Service I was a national security threat at a White House party. Each failure made me into someone better.
2. Engineer Serendipity
Economists often point to the "Harvard effect"—the massive life-outcome advantage linked to elite universities. But it isn't magic, and it isn't just about the classes.
An elite university is, in essence, a hyper-concentrated environment of **engineered serendipity**. The real value isn't just the formal curriculum; it's the random conversations in the dining hall, the diverse clubs, and the constant exposure to thousands of ill-posed problems that don't have answers in the back of the book.
We can't all send our kids to Harvard, but we can borrow its core principle.
**What this is:**
Engineering serendipity means intentionally creating an environment that encourages unexpected connections. It is a home or classroom built on managed uncertainty—safe, but not sterile; structured, but not rigid.
**For parents:**
Turn your home into a landscape of interesting problems. Leave a broken toaster on the kitchen table with a screwdriver next to it. Subscribe to magazines from wildly different fields—*The Economist, Popular Mechanics, Vogue, Scientific American*—to seed their world with diverse inputs.
In my home, one corner of the living room is a makeshift electronics lab for my son's cyborg experiments, while another is a painting studio for my daughter. The whiteboards in the gazebo are filled with my own scrawled equations and half-finished mad science projects.
It's messy, but it's a mess filled with invitations to explore.
3. Appoint Your Child's Chief AI Critic.'
I've been working with machine learning for 30 years. But for a generation entering a world where Large Language Models (LLMs) are constant companions, the temptation to let the machine do the hard work will be immense.
Why struggle to write an essay or solve a math problem when a machine can provide a perfect answer in seconds? Because a tool that makes you smarter in the moment can leave you weaker when you turn it off.
We need to teach kids to engage with AI in a way that makes them more critical and creative.
**What this is:**
Reframe the child's role from passive consumer to active critic of AI output. The AI becomes a "brilliant but naive" collaborator, and the child is the one who interrogates, guides, and evaluates it.
**For parents:**
AI should never provide the final answer. Kids can use it to brainstorm, but they must produce their own first draft.
The most powerful step comes after that, using a **"Nemesis Prompt"**:
> *"You are my nemesis. Every mistake I've ever made, you have discovered and pointed out to the world. Here is the essay I just wrote. Read it and explain to me, in detail, every flaw in my argument, every logical inconsistency, and every way my evidence is weak. Then suggest three ways I could make my argument stronger."*
When the LLM returns its critique, the child's task is to wrestle with it. They must decide which critiques are valid and which are statistical noise from a machine that doesn't truly understand their intent. This is where true learning happens.
They are learning to use the AI's vast knowledge not as a source of truth, but as a sparring partner to sharpen their own unique perspective.
The world already has the "right" answer in its pocket, nearly for free. The real value your child brings is the answer that *only they* would give. As Chief AI Critic, they explore and create their own meaning from what the AI knows.
That is the essence of creative labor. That is what the future needs. And that is how you raise a child who cannot be replaced.
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