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A.I. AND THE DEATH OF CRITICAL THINKING

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Date and time
Tuesday, September 23, 2025
6:00pm - 7:00pm
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Schools and colleges are open for business – it’s the fall semester – but the statistics are depressing. Nationally, high school seniors have scored the worst on reading results since 1992. The data, from the respected National Assessment of Education Progress, showed that a third of 12th-graders who were tested last year, did not meet basic reading skills. Forbes magazine recently reported on the “dark side of AI: tracking the decline of human cognitive skills” and the National Endowment for the Arts noted that federal data showed a slump in reading for pleasure. So, is any or all of this attributable to the invasion of AI into our kids’ classrooms?

ChatGPT was initially pitched as a useful technological “tool”, yet more educational analysts are expressing concerns that tests show we are losing fundamental critical thinking skills in the process. As Sarah O’Connor commented in a Financial Times opinion piece, “without solid skills of your own, it is only a few short steps from being supported by the machine, to finding yourself dependent on it, or subject to it.”

MIT’s recent media study published unsettling results on cognitive performance using ChatGPT and the only people who seem unconcerned are Sam Altman and other tech leaders. CF has put together a panel of AI observers, including a neuroscientist, a professor of humanities and a student to discuss some of the challenges and concerns associated with generative AI and learning. Until we know more about the cognitive effects of technology like ChatGPT, should we be inserting it into the classroom? And if, as recent studies indicate, it homogenizes thinking and creativity, are we content to let our kids’ education go into experimental free fall? Join this timely discussion.

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Celia Ford is a journalist and neuroscientist based in the Bay Area, covering AI policy at Transformer. Previously, Celia completed reporting fellowships at Vox's Future Perfect, WIRED, and The Open Notebook, where she wrote about emerging technology, the mind, public health, and (once) pole dancing. Celia has a bachelor’s degree in cognitive neuroscience from Brown University and a PhD in neuroscience from UC Berkeley.
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Carlo Rotella is a writer, journalist, and scholar. His latest book is What Can I Get Out of This?: Teaching and Learning in a Classroom Full of Skeptics. A professor of English, American Studies, and journalism at Boston College, Rotella writes regularly for the NYT Magazine and his work has appeared in The New Yorker, Harper's, and The Best American Essays.
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Ashanty Rosario is a Senior at Newtown High School in Queens, New York City. She developed an interest in journalism as a way to expand her writing beyond the comforts of fiction and to strengthen her communication skills through interviewing. She aspires to amplify the voices of underrepresented communities in media and uphold journalism’s pledge to truth and public service. Ashanty has published work in collegiate summer newspapers, such as New York University’s The Spectrum and Princeton University’s Princeton Summer Journal, and recently wrote for the Atlantic. In the future, she plans to pursue a Bachelor’s Degree in Creative Writing or English Literature, aiming to become a published author while also freelancing in journalism.
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