Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang: Don't Worry About What Your Child Studies - Worry About How They Learn

Nvidia CEO Jason Huang believes that in the AI era, children’s success will depend less on what they study and more on how effectively they learn with AI. He emphasized that creativity, storytelling, curiosity, emotional understanding, and human connection will remain valuable skills. Huang said AI will automate repetitive tasks, allowing people to focus on strategic and creative work. He also highlighted that human perception, sensitive communication, and the ability to connect with others will become even more important in the future.

Muskan Kumawat
Muskan Kumawat Verified Local Voice • 13 Apr, 2026Journalist
May 29, 2026 • 6:02 PM
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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang: Don't Worry About What Your Child Studies - Worry About How They Learn
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29 May 2026
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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang: Don't Worry About What Your Child Studies - Worry About How They Learn
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang: Don't Worry About What Your Child Studies - Worry About How They Learn

In the rapidly changing AI industry, the most frequent question asked by everyone is: What should my kid study to have a promising future? However, Jason Huang, CEO of Nvidia (one of the major manufacturers of AI chips), gives quite a different opinion. According to him, in the AI age, the primary question should not concern the choice of subjects, but how to study the subjects properly with the help of AI.

Huang gave an interview for a TV channel from Singapore, advising the parents not to worry about the subjects of their children's choice. In his opinion, the qualities that were important in the previous era-creativity, narrative, comprehension, and empathy-will remain valuable in the future.

Huang also referred to the Japanese concept of wabi-sabi, which values ​​the beauty of imperfection. “In the perfect world of AI, human emotions, mistakes and individual style can become the most distinctive,” he implied. Jason Huang described jobs as a basket of tasks. He believes AI will automate many repetitive tasks, but this will free up time for humans to perform more demanding, creative and strategic tasks. He also said that AI will not make humans lazy. Just as the advent of computers, the internet and smartphones has not made people less busy, but rather more busy, AI will also fuel human ambition.

In the age of AI, children must cultivate creative thinking, smart use of AI tools, curiosity, and a mindset of continuous learning.

Muskan Kumawat

Muskan Kumawat Verified Local Voice • 13 Apr, 2026Journalist

Journalist & Writer

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