AI and education: why hard things still matter, costly signaling theory, and the K-shaped future
AI is changing everything about how students learn — but is it making them smarter, or just more dependent? In this episode, Jason and Arry dig into what they're seeing on the front lines: students who can't write without AI, the rise of blue books and no-phone schools, and why the ability to push through frustration might be the most important skill of the next decade.
Plus — a deep dive into costly signaling theory (peacocks, Polaroids, and Waterloo degrees), why the “middle” of education is about to get squeezed, and how Gen Alpha might actually surprise us all. We also talk about AdmissionPrep's explosive social media growth, upcoming YouTube content, and what's next for the community.
Timestamps:
[0:00] — Season 2 is back: what's new with The Journey
[0:40] — The AI problem in education: superhuman vs. super dependent
[1:55] — Writing skills are atrophying — what we're seeing in 60,000 essay reviews a year
[3:08] — Cognitive decline, frustration tolerance, and why hard work still matters
[6:14] — What's the solution? Blue books, no-phone schools, and air-gapped computers
[8:44] — Don't count out Gen Z and Gen Alpha — they're more self-aware than you think
[12:00] — Brain rot, TikTok, and the generation that names its own problems
[14:16] — Digicams, Polaroids, and costly signaling theory explained
[17:36] — The K-shaped future of education: top schools win, the middle disappears
[21:01] — What happens to students who can't get into the top programs?
[25:30] — AdmissionPrep's global audience: UAE, Vietnam, and American students heading north
[27:57] — How AI has made our work faster (but not easier)
[31:46] — UBC's grading rubric says it all: years of sustained hard work
[33:03] — Pierre Bourdieu's four types of capital and why education is a social signal
[38:55] — Blinkist, ChatGPT summaries, and the cognitive psychology textbook that changed everything
[44:08] — The real value of reading a book vs. prompting a summary
[47:30] — Bright students building AI tools to keep AI use healthy
[50:17] — Gen Alpha is more pragmatic than you think
[52:31] — What's coming: YouTube, in-person workshops, and weekly presentations with 500-800 attendees
[56:08] — Where to follow AdmissionPrep + how to suggest future topics