If you’ve spent any time observing how schools actually operate, you’ve probably noticed the discrepancy between what is taught and what is obviously needed. Children are seated in rows. Instructors navigating slides. The room was filled with a sort of silent compliance. It is essentially effective at disseminating information. However, more educators are beginning to openly express the sense that something is lacking.
The Teachers College at Columbia University has been considering this concept for some time, and the conclusion that is emerging there is neither optional nor gentle: learning will be creative in the future, both structurally and unavoidably. This is not the kind of inventiveness that is added to an art class on Friday afternoons. It’s something more profound, ingrained in the way students think, fail, ask questions, and try again.

This was openly discussed at a Columbia University forum in March 2026. Panels looked at what students actually need to learn, including critical thinking, teamwork, and what the organizers called “AI literacy” in addition to content knowledge. According to several accounts, there wasn’t much easy consensus in the room. There were genuine conflicts between the demands of the moment and what schools are currently designed to provide.
It’s important to take a moment to consider that tension. Debates concerning curriculum design, testing standards, and reading instruction have consumed American education for years. Once a major player in literacy education, the Teachers College Reading and Writing Project was disbanded in 2023 after its practices came under intense criticism. That choice had an impact and served as a reminder that, when compared to actual results for actual children, even deeply ingrained educational philosophies can be found to be inadequate.
A sort of recalibration is currently taking shape, at least in the discussions taking place at places like Teachers College. According to research that has been published in scholarly journals, creative risk-taking in education is something that should be thoroughly investigated—not as a soft substitute for rigor, but as a valid route toward it. Students who are encouraged to take intellectual risks and are given the freedom to wrestle with open-ended problems frequently develop something that is difficult for standardized tests to measure but that universities and employers can plainly see.
AI is another factor that has made everything more difficult. Once-futuristic tools are now found in regular classroom settings, posing unanswered questions. Is it possible for AI to customize instruction in a way that allows educators to engage in more relational, human, and creative work? It is feasible. Early indications from districts experimenting with AI tutoring indicate that it can effectively manage specific types of practice and feedback. However, there is a legitimate concern that schools will use AI to focus more on the things they already overprioritize, like measuring retention and drilling content, rather than creating an environment that fosters true creative thinking.
As this develops, it seems that the institutions that are prepared to tolerate some discomfort are setting themselves up for long-term success. One of the world’s most complicated urban learning environments is where Teachers College is located. Its faculty and students are surrounded by the kind of messiness of the real world that makes abstract theory seem instantly testable. The context is important.
In all honesty, no one has this completely figured out. It is challenging to evaluate, scale, and defend creativity in budget meetings. However, the argument being developed, first subtly and then more overtly, from institutions such as Columbia’s Teachers College, is that the alternative—increasing the number of systems that generate graduates who are compliant, well-tested, and creatively cautious—carries significant risks of its own.
It’s still unclear if schools are prepared to listen.
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