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AI and the Uncertain Future of Jobs

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is changing industries faster than ever. What once changed in 10 years now shifts in less than two years. Parents are asking: Will AI take over coding? Will exams like IIT still matter? The truth is, nobody knows for sure. But one thing is clear — adaptability will decide success.


Why Academics Alone Won’t Be Enough

India has long been acad-obsessed. Competitive exams like IIT-JEE or sending kids abroad for higher education are still seen as the “safe” paths. But 15 years from now, when today’s 5-year-olds enter the job market, will these still be the only gateways to opportunity?

From my 7–8 years of working in startups, I’ve seen this shift firsthand: if a candidate has the right skill set, companies no longer care as much about degrees. If I need a great Java coder, I’ll hire one — IIT degree or not. Degrees open doors, yes, but skills are what keep them open.


The Three Ingredients of Career Success

Looking ahead, three elements will define a successful career:

  1. Core Skills (coding, AI, design, biotech, etc.) – These evolve rapidly. Kids will adapt.
  2. Creativity – The ability to think differently, problem-solve, and innovate.
  3. Human Skills – Collaboration, communication, leadership, empathy.

Of these, only creativity and human skills are timeless. And parents can start nurturing them today.


The Role of Extracurricular Activities

This is where extracurricular classes in Nallagandla make a difference. Structured programs aren’t just “fun” — they’re preparation for a future where creativity and collaboration will matter as much as academics.

At Jignasa, we bring industry-level mentors — from a Chess Grandmaster to a Bahubali choreographer, from Carnatic legends to theatre directors — so kids don’t just “learn an activity,” they absorb skills for life.


Even Policy Supports This Shift

The Government of India’s National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 recognized this need. It mandates play-based learning up to Grade 3, vocational courses from Grade 6, and a multidisciplinary focus. Globally, Scandinavian countries — the leaders in education — have long emphasized creativity alongside academics.

So the future is not in question. The only question is: are we preparing our kids for it?


Parents, The Choice Is Ours

Children already spend 60% of their active hours in school. If schools don’t provide enough scope for creativity, parents must take the initiative. Extracurriculars are not “extra” anymore — they’re essential.

Whether it’s chess, music, dance, theatre, or public speaking in Nallagandla, structured training builds life skills that academics alone cannot provide. And when the job market keeps shifting, these skills may be the real differentiators.


Final Thought

The future of jobs is uncertain. But one truth stands: staying curious, creative, and collaborative will always matter. By giving kids structured extracurriculars today, we’re not just filling time — we’re future-proofing their lives.

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