I’ve been teaching high school history in New York City for more than two decades. By now, I know when my students are just telling me what I want to hear. But this? This wasn’t that.
When I asked them whether humanoid robots should replace their teachers, they didn’t hesitate. They didn’t hedge. It was an emphatic “no” from every one of my students.
Then they told me exactly why.
By the way, these are not kids who are afraid of technology. They live online. They use AI. They’re not romanticizing chalk and blackboards. They have been partially educated on screens since the 2020 pandemic. But as they explained why they don’t want a robot teaching them, they also seemed to ask, in various ways: What is the purpose of school?
According to my students, the answer is not content delivery and rote memorization. For them, the classroom is about connection and community.
Over and over, they said the same thing in different ways: A robot can’t see when you’re struggling. It can’t read the room. It can’t share something real from its own life that makes you feel less isolated. It can’t build the kind of trust that makes a teenager actually want to show up to school and try. The kids talked about their teachers as role models, as people who taught them how to handle failure, how to treat other people, and how to keep going when something is challenging.