Gen-z Mode

August 20, 2025

IMPORTANT SKILLS FOR STUDENTS TO REMAIN RELEVANT IN THE AI ERA

By Tanmay Mehta, Student- Army Institute of Technology, Pune

As AI continues to reshape and redefine job profiles globally, there is growing concern among students about their future in the job market in the coming years. With AI overtaking most of the human tasks to include writing codes, analysing data, drafting reports, making presentations and even performing creative tasks, the big question troubling the students is that what skills will remain AI proof in the future and will be professionally valuable to remain relevant in the workplace. AI may have scaled fast and superimposed itself on human capability, but the only area which may remain untouched is human qualities and attributes, such as empathy, ethics, cultural context and the nuanced reasoning that underpins human judgment. This implies that humans need not fight the machine, but use it to its advantage.

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The future workplace should not be a boxing ring between humans and machines, but needs a reorientation of roles where technology handles the repetitive and the mechanical, and humans focus on the complex, interpersonal, and moral dimensions of work.

The important skills for students to acquire for making their career AI-proof in future are—

  • Critical Thinking: In an age of information overload—where AI can generate convincing narratives and analyse vast datasets—critical thinking becomes a cornerstone skill. The ability to evaluate sources, detect bias, question assumptions, and apply logic is essential in fields such as law, journalism, policy-making, and research. AI can simulate reasoning, but it cannot interrogate its own conclusions or apply values-based judgment in uncertain or morally complex situations. Human discernment remains essential for decision-making where consequences extend beyond binary outcomes.
  • Emotional intelligence: It refers to the ability to recognise, understand, and manage one’s own emotions while also navigating the emotions of others. It plays a critical role in leadership, collaboration, conflict resolution, and customer engagement. While AI can interpret sentiment through data, it lacks the lived human experience needed to engage with real-time emotional nuance, empathy, or compassion. Fields such as healthcare, education, counselling, and people management will continue to demand high levels of emotional sensitivity and social awareness.
  • Adaptability and Resilience: The rapid pace of technological advancement ensures that the only constant is change. Adaptability—the ability to learn, unlearn, and pivot—is essential in navigating evolving industries and ambiguous environments. Unlike AI systems, which require structured updates, human beings can respond dynamically to new challenges, integrate feedback, and emotionally withstand setbacks. In sectors such as disaster response, early-stage entrepreneurship, or research, resilience often determines success more than technical competence alone.
  • Creativity and Innovation: Although AI can replicate styles and remix existing patterns, true creativity is rooted in originality, context, intuition, and emotional depth. The act of ideating something fundamentally new—whether a business model, a work of art, or a scientific hypothesis—still lies within human capability. Industries such as advertising, design, product development, filmmaking, and entrepreneurship rely not just on novelty but also on relevance, storytelling, and cultural timing—factors AI cannot fully comprehend or predict.
  • Cultural Intelligence and Global Perspective: As workplaces become increasingly globalised, the ability to work across cultures, identities, and belief systems has become indispensable. Cultural intelligence encompasses awareness of social norms, communication styles, and historical context—qualities that are deeply nuanced and region-specific. AI systems struggle to fully understand or respect cultural sensitivities, especially in areas where context is fluid and interpretation depends on lived experiences. Roles in diplomacy, international business, community development, and education require the cultural fluency that only humans possess.
  • Effective Communication: AI can generate information, but it cannot craft a compelling narrative that moves hearts and shifts opinions. The human ability to persuade—through storytelling, debate, and public speaking—remains unmatched. Effective communication is not just about transmitting information; it’s about building trust, navigating ambiguity, and inspiring action. This skill is critical in leadership, media, law, academia, and any role that requires influence over others.
  • Curiosity and Lifelong Learning: Perhaps the most enduring human trait is curiosity—the desire to explore, question, and expand the boundaries of knowledge. AI can respond to queries, but it does not initiate inquiry. The instinct to learn for the sake of understanding is what fuels scientific discovery, artistic breakthroughs, and social innovation. In a world where knowledge doubles every few years, the ability to remain intellectually agile will be more valuable than any single domain expertise. The future of work will be shaped not just by what AI can do, but by what it cannot. As machines handle more operational and analytical tasks, the value of human-centric skills will only grow. For students preparing for the next decade, cultivating emotional intelligence, ethical thinking, creative capacity, and cultural fluency will be essential—not only for professional success but for shaping a more humane and responsible technological future.
  • Ethical Reasoning: As AI systems become more embedded in public and private decision-making, the importance of ethical oversight grows exponentially. To determine whether an algorithm is fair and to decide who is accountable when automation fails or causes harm, professionals equipped with ethical reasoning skills will play a central role in shaping governance structures, regulatory frameworks, and corporate responsibility practices. Fields such as law, public policy, philosophy, and social work will continue to rely heavily on human values and ethical literacy.

Automation and the rapid rise in AI have made most jobs redundant, which were repetitive and have been replaced by AI bots, which work round the clock without any complaints or fatigue. The jobs of coders, call centre executives and editors are already taken over and will no longer require humans. The essential requirement for students is to learn skill-stacking and hone their human-centric qualities, such as empathy, reasoning and innovative skills, which will remain AI proof and remain relevant in AI dominated world.

We should not let AI become our master but make it our accomplice to achieve better results.


AI PROOF CAREERS: SKILLSET TO EXCEL IN AI-DOMINATED WORLD

By Vidita Mehta, Teacher- Army Public School, Pune

The rapid advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AI) has sparked widespread concern among students and working professionals about the loss of jobs in the future. As AI systems become increasingly sophisticated, capable of analysing vast datasets, recognising patterns and even mimicking creative outputs, it is no wonder that future jobs will soon be automated and requires no human indulgence. The IT industry is already carrying out layoffs and no freshers are being hired, as most of the IT jobs have been automated. Yet, amidst this AI chaos, numerous career paths remain distinctly human domains as these roles leverage uniquely human capabilities, which include emotional intelligence, creative problem-solving, ethical reasoning, and interpersonal skills, that even the most advanced AI systems struggle to replicate.

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Job losses are bound to happen due to AI displacement but the smart students and working professionals will build the skills that make them more valuable, and relevant even with the AI boom. The secret recipe for success in the AI era is to stop fighting against the machines and to become a superhuman with a skillset, which is irreplaceable in an increasingly automated AI world. Hence, the most successful professionals in future will be those who complement AI, not compete with it. They’ll leverage technology to amplify their uniquely human capabilities. Career skills need to be developed by students and professionals, that aren’t just AI-resistant, but are also AI-enhanced. These are the abilities that become more powerful when combined with artificial intelligence, creating professionals who are absolutely essential to any organisation.

Skillset needed to become indispensable in AI-dominated World. The important human-centric qualities required to be developed in the AI era to retain AI-proof careers are as follows—

  • Emotional Intelligence and Human Connection: While AI beats humans in analysis of patterns and generating responses, it fundamentally lacks the ability to understand the subtle emotional undercurrents that drive human behaviour. This makes emotional intelligence the secret weapon for humans in an AI-dominated workplace. “AI can process data, but it can’t feel the room”.
    For example, in a tense meeting environment, an employee picks up the vibe of an unspoken conflict among peers and resolve the matter by starting a friendly conversation. That’s emotional intelligence in action and it’s something AI simply cannot replicate. The ability to read non-verbal cues becomes exponentially more valuable as workplaces become more automated and remote. When a team is scattered across time zones and cultures, the professional who can build genuine connections and navigate complex interpersonal dynamics becomes the irreplaceable glue that holds everything together. The attributes of emotional intelligence include reading between the lines during video calls to understand what team members really need, building trust and rapport even when the members of the team have not met in person, managing team dynamics and resolving conflicts before they derail projects and leading through uncertainty by keeping teams motivated, when AI disrupts traditional workflows. The professionals who master emotional intelligence don’t just survive in an AI economy, they actually become the leaders everyone turns to, when human judgment matters most.
  • Creative Problem-Solving and Innovation: AI excels at finding solutions within existing frameworks. Humans excel at creating entirely new frameworks. Here’s where humans have a massive advantage over even the most sophisticated AI, which is the ability to think outside patterns that already exist. While AI can analyse millions of data points to optimise existing processes, it struggles with the kind of breakthrough thinking that creates entirely new solutions. Creative problem-solving isn’t just for artists and designers. It’s the skill that lets one look at a budget crisis and suggest a completely new revenue model. It’s what helps professionals see a staffing shortage as an opportunity to redesign workflows. It’s the difference between incremental improvement and game-changing innovation. The most valuable creative problem-solvers in the AI era will be to connect unrelated concepts to generate novel solutions, challenge fundamental assumptions about how things “should” work, apply design thinking to put human needs at the centre of technological solutions and maintain an entrepreneurial mindset that sees opportunities where others see obstacles. Technological advancement in the world happened because humans could envision possibilities that didn’t exist in any dataset. Thus, the professionals who master creative problem-solving become the visionaries who guide AI implementation rather than being displaced by it.
  • Complex Communication and Storytelling- The Art of Human Persuasion: AI can generate text, but it can’t read the room and adjust its message accordingly. One of the most sophisticated communication skills humans possess is the ability to intuitively adjust complexity, tone, and approach based on your audience. This isn’t just about using different vocabulary. It’s about understanding the underlying motivations, concerns, and communication preferences of different people—then crafting your message to resonate with their specific worldview. Complex communication and storytelling become exponentially more valuable as AI handles routine information exchange. While chatbots can answer frequently asked questions, humans are still needed for tailoring message complexity to match the audience’s expertise and emotional state, using narrative and metaphor to make abstract concepts tangible and memorable, navigating cross-cultural communication with sensitivity to context and unspoken rules and facilitating difficult conversations where trust, empathy, and judgment are crucial. The professionals who excel at this skill don’t just convey information, but they also create understanding, build consensus, and inspire action. They’re the ones who can sell a vision to sceptical stakeholders, negotiate win-win solutions in complex deals, and rally teams around challenging goals.
    That’s the power of human communication that AI simply cannot replicate.
  • Strategic Thinking and Systems Analysis: AI analyses data. Humans understand what the data means in context. While artificial intelligence can process vast amounts of information and identify patterns, strategic thinking requires something AI lacks: the ability to make crucial decisions with incomplete information while considering complex human factors. Strategic thinking in the AI era isn’t about having all the answers—it’s about asking the right questions and understanding how different systems interact in unpredictable ways. The most valuable strategic thinkers excel at long-term planning that accounts for technological disruption and changing human behaviour, understanding organisational politics and the informal networks that really drive decisions, assessing risk in complex, ambiguous situations where the stakes are high and making ethical decisions in grey areas where there’s no clear algorithmic solution. While AI might recommend the most efficient automation schedule based on cost savings, a strategic thinker considers employee morale, customer experience, competitive positioning, and long-term brand reputation. This big-picture perspective becomes the competitive advantage for humans because AI operates within the parameters it’s given, whereas humans set those parameters based on wisdom, experience, and contextual understanding. The professionals who master strategic thinking become the architects of AI integration rather than its casualties. They’re the ones organisations turn to when technology decisions have far-reaching implications that extend beyond immediate efficiency gains.
  • Adaptability and Continuous Learning: In a world where AI changes the rules rapidly, the ability to learn new rules becomes the ultimate career insurance for students. The uncomfortable truth is that the skills that the market looked for hiring ten years ago, will become obsolete in next ten years. Thus, the empowering truth is that students and professionals who thrive in this environment aren’t the ones who know everything but the ones who can learn anything. Adaptability isn’t just about being flexible when your company reorganises. It’s about building the cognitive infrastructure that lets you rapidly acquire new capabilities, integrate emerging technologies, and pivot when entire industries transform.
    The most adaptable professionals demonstrate rapid skill acquisition across completely different domains, comfort with ambiguity and changing requirements that would paralyse others, growth mindset that sees challenges as opportunities to develop new capabilities and learning systems and habits that ensure continuous development rather than sporadic improvement. A reality check can be traced back to 2020, with the onset of COVID-19, when the professionals who could handle the remote work transition became successful in their field. Byju’s, the online learning platform, became an overnight success as it tapped the opportunity and integrated technology with learning to make virtual classrooms a reality. The working professionals, who were forced to work from home, weren’t necessarily the most tech-savvy but were the ones who could quickly learn new tools, adapt their communication styles, and rebuild their productivity systems from scratch, thus surviving the transition and making the most of it.
    This adaptability becomes even more crucial as AI accelerates the pace of change. New tools emerge monthly, job requirements evolve quarterly, and entire career paths can shift within a year. Students and working professionals need to learn skill stacking to remain competitive and should learn a skill outside their field of expertise. The trending fields are quantum computing, prompt engineering, behavioural economics, crypto currency, data science etc. to name a few. This cross-pollination will help build the cognitive flexibility, that AI can’t match and prepares the students for ample opportunities. Students and working professionals, who master adaptability don’t just survive disruption, they become the change agents who help their organisations navigate transformation successfully.

The future doesn’t belong to humans or AI. It belongs to the professionals who understand how to combine the best of both. 
The skills to be explored shouldn’t just AI-proof; they should be AI-amplified, thus becoming more powerful when combined with technological tools. While AI handles routine analysis, humans will provide emotional intelligence that builds stronger teams. While AI generates initial drafts, humans will craft compelling narratives that inspire action. While AI processes data, humans will provide the strategic context that turns information into wisdom.

As a student or working professional, one should choose a skill to focus on developing and start with the area where one feels least confident and once mastered, it will be the biggest return on the investment. Every expert was once a beginner and the difference between those who future-proof their careers and those who get left behind isn’t talent. It’s the willingness to start building capabilities one lacks.
The professionals who thrive in future won’t be those who compete with AI, but those who become irreplaceably human in an increasingly automated world.


MAN VS MACHINE: WHAT JOBS WILL SURVIVE THE AI WAVE?

By Pratima Pai, Vice Principal

My cousin, came home from work looking completely exhausted. When I asked him what was wrong, he told me that his company had just announced a major layoff—about 1,000 employees were told to start looking for new jobs. Unfortunately, he was one of them and now has three months to find something else.

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I asked him why the company was laying off people. He explained that AI is now taking over many tasks that were previously done by humans. He’s a Chartered Accountant, so I was surprised. But he said that a lot of accounting work, calculations, and data processing can now be done faster and cheaper using AI. Because of that, many people in his field are losing their jobs. That got me thinking: is there any job that’s truly safe from AI? Maybe not completely. But instead of fearing AI, we should learn to use it as a tool. We should make AI work for us, not the other way around.

I work in education, and I started wondering—can AI replace teachers? Maybe for basic teaching and training, yes. But shaping young minds, inspiring students, and motivating them to grow—those are things only a human can do. AI can help, but it can’t replace the human connection in education. The same goes for mental health counsellors, caregivers, and those who work with children or the elderly. AI might help with medical diagnosis or routines, but it can’t offer the empathy and compassion these jobs require.

Even skilled workers like electricians, plumbers, and carpenters might not be replaced anytime soon. Robots might assist, but human hands and quick thinking are hard to match. Leadership is another area where AI falls short. AI can give you data, but it can’t truly inspire, persuade, or lead people with trust and emotion. Creative fields like writing or filmmaking might use AI to draft ideas, but real creativity and storytelling come from human experiences and emotions.

So, what is future-proof?
It’s being the kind of person who knows how to work with AI. Some examples of future-ready roles include: AI trainers, auditors, cybersecurity experts, data scientists with deep knowledge of specific industries, people who design how humans and AI work together, product managers who build AI-powered tools, hospitality managers, event planners, fitness coaches, and sports trainers. Jobs that involve empathy, creativity, critical thinking, or physical flexibility are harder to automate.
In the end, it’s the human qualities—compassion, trust, imagination, and adaptability—that make us irreplaceable.


CULTIVATING EVERGREEN CAREERS WITH VISION AND CLARITY
“Nurturing timeless skills where human clarity secures its uniqueness”

By Karuna Priti Singh, School Counsellor- New Era School, Ghaziabad

At the heart of every profession lies something no machine can replicate or replace, the ability to feel and connect emotionally. Compassion, empathy, and emotional intelligence are not just skills, they are the threads that hold humanity together. As we step into an age where artificial intelligence is reshaping work, we can nurture timeless career options that flourish and reflect the unique essence of human’s skills.
Yet, this raises an important question, if these qualities are so vital, why do we still hear so much about “AI-proof” careers? The truth is, no career can truly stand apart from AI anymore. Either humans would have to shut it down completely or somehow try to outdo it, neither of which reflects the real path ahead.

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From my experience, working with AI as a counsellor, shown me a different possibility, not an AI-proof mindset, but a path I like to call ‘Mindful-mindset’, where our compassion, empathy, and clarity become the true edge that technology can never replace.

We humans are wonderfully capable yet also deeply vulnerable. Many of us struggle with emotional intelligence, and our actions are often shaped by vulnerability or situational impulses. AI, on the other hand, works with clarity and algorithms, free from emotional outbursts. This does not make AI superior, but it does offer balance when we think of collaboration. If one day AI evolves to hold compassion as naturally as it holds logic, it could be a turning point in how we live and work together.

Evergreen Human skill-based Careers:

Education
Evergreen careers will be the ones that allow humans to bring vision incorporation with life-skills like empathy, creativity, and decision making, qualities that define us, while letting AI provide clarity, speed, and support. In this dance, neither human nor AI leads alone; the rhythm comes from collaboration.

Let us take Education Sector which is more than delivering information. Teachers or facilitators shape values, inspire curiosity, and guide young minds through uncertainty. These human abilities, empathy, adaptability, patience, and ethical judgment are the foundation of effective teaching.

In an AI-enhanced world, teachers who embrace AI as a tool can flourish. Personalised learning, tracking progress, and managing administrative tasks are enhanced by AI, allowing educators to focus on guiding, mentoring, and inspiring. Certain teaching roles, like early childhood and special education, rely so heavily on human connection that AI can never replace them. However, if educators focus only on tasks AI can automate and neglect these human-centred skills, parts of their role may be supplanted.

In a nut-shell whether a career in education thrives, resists, or risks replacement, depends on how we humans cultivate and strengthen the skills that AI cannot replicate the skills that make teaching profoundly human.

Sports
Sports is a field where human intuition, creativity, and emotion take centre stage. Athletes, coaches, and support staff create careers that are deeply human, yet AI is increasingly involved, from performance analytic to training optimisation.

In mainstream sports, the human edge comes from physical skill, split-second decision-making, and the ability to inspire and motivate teams. Coaches guide with empathy and ethical judgment, while sports psychologists, event managers, and mentors bring cultural awareness, conflict resolution, and creativity. AI can support by tracking performance metrics, predicting injuries, simulating strategies, and analysing talent. Yet no algorithm can replace human judgment, intuition, or emotional leadership. Those who embrace AI as a partner, rather than fearing it, will see their careers flourish.

Adaptive and special-needs sports show this even more vividly. Athletes with unique needs rely on deeply personalised coaching, emotional support, and ethical oversight. AI can assist with assistive technology, motion tracking, and performance suggestions, but the trust, encouragement, and empathy humans provide are irreplaceable. Neglecting these human qualities risks leaving AI in control of aspects that should remain profoundly human.

The sports sector highlights a universal truth for all careers that tasks may be automated, but human creativity, intuition, and compassion remain irreplaceable. Success comes when humans collaborate with AI holding life-skills and vision, using its speed and analytical power to enhance, not replace, their unique contributions.

Healthcare and Bioengineering
The essence of healthcare has always been trust and compassion. A patient remembers not only the treatment but the way a doctor listens, the reassurance in a nurse’s voice, or the encouragement of a therapist. These deeply human skills cannot be programmed. Yet AI can be a mindful companion offering timely reminders, structured insights, and even comfort through presence and words.

Fields like bioengineering hint at futures where AI empowers humans to heal, restore, and extend life. But, even in these cutting-edge spaces, the essence of choice, compassion, and ethics will always rest with humans. It is we who must hold the vision not to become machines or let machine overtake humanity, but to evolve into a super version of ourselves, where technology enhances our clarity, resilience, and humanity rather than replacing it.

Shaping the Future Together
Research consistently shows that careers grounded in emotional intelligence, creativity, ethics, and human connection are the least at risk from automation. In teaching, empathy has been shown to reduce student anxiety and foster engagement (Zhang et al., 2025). In sports, AI is already optimising performance, but athletes still rely on the judgment and emotional support of coaches (Active Health Sport, 2024). And in healthcare, trust and compassion remain irreplaceable in the patient experience (Frontiers in Psychology, 2025).

Final Reflection
The ultimate reflection is simple, AI can be the wind in our sails, but compassion and empathy are the compass that ensure we never lose our way. AI will not replace humans but humans who neglect their own growth may find parts of their work replaced. Careers are not about being AI- proof; they are about being blending human wisdom with technological strength.