Once again, we are commemorating World Children’s Day, which is dedicated to the adoption of the International Convention on the Rights of the Child. Much has happened since the convention was adopted in 1959, and in spite of impressive progress, billions of children are still missing out on the essential rights that are enshrined in the Convention. The right to education, healthy food, and clean water; to protection from violence and access to health care. Simply put, every child has the right to survive and thrive. We, the grown-ups in their world, are tasked to make that right come true. This task is becoming more complex in a hybrid world, especially one that is supercharged by generative AI.

The convergence of World Children’s Day and the second anniversary of ChatGPT presents a poignant moment to reflect: Are we truly preparing our children to thrive in a world accelerating at an unmatched pace, or are we unintentionally setting the stage for a generation left adrift in the tides of artificial intelligence and relentless digital transformation? While the rapid ascent of AI holds remarkable promise to enhance children’s lives, it also unveils profound complexities — ones that call for deliberate, thoughtful navigation to ensure no child is left behind in this technological revolution.

Children’s needs in this AI-driven world are as diverse as their realities. For those immersed in societies amplified by generative AI, the priorities include safeguarding privacy, ensuring solid data protection, and addressing the risks of overexposure to technology. There’s also the subtle yet critical challenge of preserving their sense of agency in a world where AI assistance operates 24/7. Conversely, for the billions of children excluded from the digital revolution, the emphasis must shift to providing access, creating equitable opportunities, and leveraging low-tech solutions to bridge the gap. The challenge before us is not merely about managing technology; it’s about shaping a world where every child, regardless of circumstance, has the tools to flourish – with and without AI.

A World Evolving At Two Speeds

The digital divide is one of the most pressing issues of our time. According to UNICEF, roughly two-thirds of school-age children — around 1.3 billion — lack access to the internet at home. This exclusion perpetuates educational and economic inequalities, creating a world that evolves at two speeds: one for the digitally connected and another for those left behind.

In high-income countries, children can access AI-powered tools that personalize education, improve learning outcomes, and foster creativity. For instance, AI platforms like Duolingo or adaptive learning tools are helping students learn at their own pace. However, for children without digital access, even basic online resources for homework or skills development remain out of reach. Even in the United States, nearly 17% of teens experience the “homework gap” due to unreliable internet access. Now picture the situation in a country like Haiti where more than half of the population lives on less than two dollars a day.

That disparity is more than an infrastructure issue; it’s about the opportunity that comes with access. As technology drives innovation, children without access are at risk of being permanently marginalized, creating a generational chasm that is difficult to bridge.

The Imperative Of Double Literacy

In an AI-driven world, addressing the digital divide is only the first step. Equally important is equipping children with double literacy:

Brain Literacy – Understanding and optimizing natural intelligence, nurturing creativity, critical thinking, emotional intelligence, and problem-solving skills.

Algorithmic Literacy – Comprehending how AI systems work, including their design, biases, and the way they influence decision-making.

If it is embedded in a holistic understanding of self and society this type of double literacy ensures that children don’t just passively consume technology but actively shape it. It empowers them to navigate a hybrid world where their online and offline aspirations are aligned with meaningful action. For example, children need to understand how algorithms can curate their online experiences — whether it’s social media feeds or educational content — and how these systems can both amplify opportunities and reinforce biases. Simultaneously, they must develop the emotional and cognitive resilience to engage thoughtfully with technology while maintaining a strong sense of agency – and the desire to stand up for their own rights and those of others.

Our Evolving Role In A Hybrid World

Empowering children with double literacy — both brain literacy and algorithmic literacy — is not just an individual task; it is a collective responsibility that spans parents, educators, and governments. Each party has a distinct yet interconnected role to play in preparing children to thrive in a world that is shaped by the complementarity of natural and artificial intelligence.

Caregivers: Curating Critical Thinking

Parents and caregivers lay the foundation for how children engage with technology. Beyond simply managing screen time, they can foster curiosity by encouraging open conversations about how AI tools work and impact daily life. For example, discussing the role of voice assistants, search engines, or recommendation systems can help children grasp the underlying mechanics while developing a critical lens. Modeling mindful engagement with AI—questioning its benefits, recognizing its limitations, and identifying its biases—teaches children to approach technology with curiosity and discernment.

Educators: Elevating Ethical AI Literacy

The responsibility of educators goes far beyond teaching technical skills like coding. Ethical AI literacy must become a core component of modern curricula, equipping students with the ability to understand and evaluate the systems they interact with. This includes unpacking how algorithms influence everything from search results to social media feeds, fostering critical thinking about bias, and encouraging active participation in shaping AI-driven environments. Schools should also provide opportunities for students to engage with AI through project-based learning, where they can apply these concepts in real-world contexts.

Governments: Grooming Growth

Governments hold the key to addressing systemic inequities, particularly the digital divide that leaves billions of children without access to the internet. Closing this gap demands bold investment in infrastructure to ensure universal internet access, especially in underserved regions. But connectivity alone is not enough — governments must also support programs that make digital education equitable and empowering. This includes funding resources to train teachers, provide students with digital tools, and create inclusive policies that ensure all children, regardless of background, have the knowledge and skills to thrive in an AI-driven future.

From GenZ To GenAI

With the rise of generative AI — tools like ChatGPT and MidJourney — we have entered the grey zone of a paradigm shift. Today’s children are part of what can be called “Generation AI,” where technology begins to reshape foundational aspects of their learning, play, and social interactions.

For those of us who remember a pre-AI world, this shift brings radical responsibility. We are the bridge between the past and future, tasked with curating curiosity, creativity, and critical thinking in the next generation. This involves actively teaching them to question how AI works, where its limits lie, and how to use it as a tool rather than becoming its tool.

The Power Of “Agentic As”

The takeaway is simple: we need the power of agentic A’s. Combined, they offer a pathway to empower children and ourselves to navigate the hybrid reality of AI and humanity:

Attitude – Embracing a proactive role in shaping how we interact with AI, ensuring that we are agents of change, not passive recipients.

Alignment – Synchronizing aspirations with actions offline and aspirations with algorithms online, ensuring that technology serves meaningful goals.

Ability – Cultivating double literacy, merging brain literacy (critical thinking and creativity) with algorithmic literacy (understanding and shaping AI systems).

Ambition – Leveraging AI’s potential to create systemic change, ensuring that every child — no matter their circumstances — has a fair chance to fulfill their potential.

A Call To Action

World Children’s Day is a reminder that the future is not predetermined; it is created by the choices we make today. By addressing the digital divide, investing in double literacy, and fostering the agentic A’s, we can ensure that AI becomes a catalyst for inclusion, opportunity, and equity.

As parents, caregivers, educators, and policymakers, we have the unique privilege of shaping a world where technology enhances children’s agency. Are we ready to empower the next generation to thrive in an AI-driven world? If the answer is yes, the time to act is now. If the answer is no, the time to change that was yesterday.

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