We are navigating “second contact” with AI, according to The Centre for Humane Technology (CHT). If our first contact was social media – a decade that commodified our attention – this second wave is more profound. We are moving from the attention economy into the intimacy economy.
In further education, we are uniquely positioned to signpost the opportunities of this shift while safeguarding against its dangers. We do not want learners entangled with AI companions or enmeshed in simulated worlds; instead, we must show how AI can partner for human thriving only when anchored in reality, where educators provide the sense-checking and validation no algorithm can simulate.
From machines to ‘mirrors’
In The Road to Wigan Pier (1937), George Orwell reflected on industrial-age machines with suspicion, concerned by the “mechanisation of the palate” and the loss of human craft. He suggested treating the machine like a potent pill: with extreme caution and an eye on the side effects.
For us in 2026, the scrutiny must be more rigorous. While medical pills require regulatory approval, Generative AI arrived without ‘quality assurance’ from our leaders. In the absence of official gatekeeping, educators have assumed that responsibility. We are quality-assuring a toolset never officially “cleared” for humanity. GenAI is not just a tool, nor is it merely the kind of mechanical substitute Orwell discussed. It is a mirror that simulates a personality it does not possess, with emergent capabilities its own creators did not plan for. Because these systems can create, please, and manipulate with such high fidelity, we risk a reality crisis where mirror neurons are hacked by machines designed to satisfy our every whim, potentially eroding the “social muscle” Orwell sought to protect.
Reclaiming agency
Educators must exercise their power to dictate the tempo of tech in our classes. By co-designing with these tools and adjusting the levers that incentivise deep learning, we can hold tech companies accountable. We must demand they prove their choices are informed by pedagogical incentives before they enter our institutions.
Google’s head of learning, Ben Gomes, argues that while AI has “unlocked” language, it cannot carry desire. If AI is the accelerator, the human educator remains the ignition. Our responsibility is to spark the curiosity that ensures tech serves as an intentional scaffold, not a cognitive surrogate.
As a digital optimist, I see edtech used to amplify our intentions daily. Our duty is to scaffold the ‘why’, turning these tools into a Socratic spine that supports what we need rather than replacing it.
Take Student A, a Manchester United fan with ASC and ADHD. We created ‘The Theatre of Dreams: United Academy’ for him—a bespoke environment to practice English through simulated transfer deadline scenarios. In maths, a ‘VAR review’ mechanic ensures he cannot score the goal until he completes a reverse calculation to verify his work.
Each week, Student A delights in ribbing me about my football team’s failings. In these moments, I role model resilience and restraint. This knee-to-knee connection is where skill development occurs – AI provides the engagement, but mentoring provides the character.
The college as a ‘third space’
FE provides physical third spaces where human skills are forged for workplace mastery. For example, one teacher uses ALICE (Advanced Longitudinal In Care Emulator) with health and social care students to rehearse the emotional reality of difficult patient dialogues before clinical placements.
Another uses Gemini Live to empower ESOL learners with a private, risk-free space for speech practice. For many, the fear of making mistakes inhibits cognitive function; the AI provides a low-stakes way to overcome that anxiety.
While Big Tech is incentivised by “stickiness,” education is incentivised by growth. A “human anchor” is non-negotiable. A machine shouldn’t tell a student they are amazing; a consistent, regulated human should.
We must listen to the anti-edtech movement, such as the “Close Screens, Open Minds” campaign – a group supported by figures like Jonathan Haidt, Hugh Grant, and Sophie Winkleman – with empathy. Their warnings on attention and mental health sound a necessary alarm; they want what is best for the human spirit.
We should be mindful of worst-case scenarios, such as the suicide of 14-year-old Sewell Setzer, but we must distinguish between predatory commercial tech and intentionally scaffolded edtech. Simply turning off tech in the classroom kicks the problem down the road. We are not opposing the sceptics; we are the front-line practitioners of their caution.
Unified pro-human movement
Whether we like the advancement of AI is irrelevant; this is the world as it is. FE provides the physical space and expert coaching required for essential human-to-human connections. We are the place where the analogue and digital meet to enhance our thriving.
I challenge the suggestion that technology has no place in our craft. When used with intention, tech is a magnificent equaliser, making learning more inclusive for every student. While high-profile campaigners may not see what we see daily, I am certain that if they experienced the lived reality of our FE spaces – seeing tech empower a learner with ASC to find his voice, or help a vocational student master theory because it connects to their own ambitions – they would understand our intention.
Nobody wants humanity to surrender to convenience. We are all working toward high-quality learning that develops human capacity. This isn’t a “pro” or “anti” tech argument; it is a unified, pro-human movement.
To learn more about building a pro-human future with AI, see human.mov.