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Home / Education / AI Fears Drive Demand for 'Safe' Global Degrees

AI Fears Drive Demand for 'Safe' Global Degrees

26 Nov

•

Summary

  • Students and parents worry AI will displace jobs, seeking 'AI-safe' degrees abroad.
  • Healthcare and psychology are highlighted as fields less vulnerable to automation.
  • Experts caution 'AI-safe' degrees are often marketing tactics exploiting anxiety.
AI Fears Drive Demand for 'Safe' Global Degrees

Growing concerns over AI-driven job displacement have led to a surge in demand for 'AI-safe' degrees among Indian students pursuing international education. Universities and counselors are promoting programs in sectors such as healthcare, psychology, and life sciences, which are perceived as less susceptible to automation.

While a recent report highlights these fields as offering long-term job stability, experts caution that the 'AI-safe' label is largely a marketing construct. They argue that true job security lies in developing complex human skills like empathy, critical reasoning, and specialized research, which AI currently struggles to replicate.

Instead of chasing unverified 'AI-proof' labels, advisors recommend focusing on AI-augmented careers. This involves building skills that work alongside AI, exploring hybrid roles, and choosing countries with strong post-study work opportunities, ensuring a focus on future-ready education rather than mere reassurance.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
AI-safe degrees are academic programs in fields like healthcare or psychology that are believed to be less vulnerable to job automation by artificial intelligence.
Experts suggest the 'AI-safe' degree concept is largely a marketing tactic to capitalize on student anxiety, rather than a proven academic or career guarantee.
Countries like the US, UK, Australia, Canada, and Ireland are seeing promotion of these degrees, driven by demand for talent in sectors less affected by AI.

Read more news on

Indiaside-arrowEducationside-arrowArtificial Intelligence (AI)side-arrow

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