Cognitive Offloading Is the New Illiteracy

Picture of MacKenzie Price
MacKenzie Price

Most parents think the most dangerous thing in their kid’s life is technology.

It’s not.

The most dangerous thing in your kid’s life is the belief that they don’t need to learn facts because of technology.

Recently, I’ve heard parents say things like: “It’s not a big deal if my kids don’t learn much at school. AI is going to create a society with universal basic income anyway.”

Or: “I don’t think my kids need to learn basic math anymore, because AI is the best calculator of all time.”

I know it may seem futile to quiz your kid with flashcards when the answer to every question now lives in their pocket (why memorize anything when AI knows everything?), but I’m here to tell you the truth.

Your kid absolutely needs to learn facts in the age of AI. More so than ever.

Here’s why.


Cognitive offloading is the new illiteracy.

More and more people are relying on AI to do their thinking for them, and their brains are literally atrophying because of it.

It’s called “cognitive offloading.”

One viral study had participants write essays in three conditions: with ChatGPT, with Google, and on their own. EEG scans showed the ChatGPT group had the lowest neural connectivity across the board. When researchers asked them to rewrite the essay from memory, they couldn’t. They had almost no recall of the content they had just “produced.”

More research paints the same picture. When your kid relies on AI tools to do their thinking for them, their brain isn’t actively engaging. And when brains aren’t active, they’re atrophying. (You know the saying: “If you don’t use it, you’ll lose it.”)

This is cognitive offloading in action: brains that slowly forget how to think because something else is always thinking for them. It’s happening right now, in classrooms all over the country, with parental permission.

You don’t want this for your kid. So teach them facts, even in this age of AI. Fill their head with knowledge. It’s going to compound as they get older.


Without facts, your kid will never become “a critical thinker.”

Research shows that “critical thinking” is largely dependent on how much you actually know about a topic. If you take away the fact base, it’s not really critical thinking. You’re just making stuff up.

We see this all the time with ChatGPT hallucinations. When AI tries to reason without a fact base (i.e. it goes rogue with data and generates its own version of reality), we call it “hallucinating.”

Humans can do the same thing. “Critical thinking” without a set of facts is just creating your own version of reality, one that’s not actually true.

So if you want your kid to become a critical thinker, they need to have domain knowledge. It’s not enough for them to say, “One sec, let me look it up.” They need to possess the knowledge, to own it and access it themselves.

If your kid can’t tell a credible source from a sketchy one, a sound argument from a logical fallacy, or historical context from fake news, they’ll grow up to be the easiest person in the room to manipulate. By friends, bosses, social media, and yes, by AI.

A kid who has zero knowledge base (only the ability to check their phone for the correct answer) is not a critical thinker waiting to bloom. They’re becoming a passive onlooker to a world they will only ever be able to observe, not participate in.

Meanwhile, a kid with a strong knowledge base doesn’t have those limits.

They’re actually learning faster.

Studies show that the more your kid knows, the faster they learn. Knowledge literally expands your brain for more knowledge.

In one study, kids with lower IQs but deep soccer knowledge outperformed kids with higher IQs and no soccer knowledge across every measure of memory and comprehension. The takeaway: prior knowledge beats IQ. This finding has since been replicated from chess to physics to computer programming.

The more your kid knows, the more connections they can make. This is why analogies are so powerful. If your daughter loves Taylor Swift, you can teach her about the French Revolution through the lens of folklore. If your son loves baseball, you can teach probability through batting averages.

Ultimately, knowledge is a graph. The bigger the graph, the faster your kid can take in new information and the sharper their critical thinking becomes.


Knowledge will be the new edge.

We’re entering a knowledge drought.

I know that sounds ironic, because information has never been more abundant. Every fact ever recorded is one prompt away. And yet the knowledge actually living inside our heads is drying up. It’s like the floodwaters are rising and the reservoirs are emptying.

When information becomes infinite, knowledge becomes rare. In a world of cognitive offloaders, the kid who actually knows things will stand out like a lighthouse.

Think of your own social circles: your coworker who can rattle off every president and what they accomplished, your best friend who can drive across town without Google Maps, your niece who can calculate a tip in her head without reaching for her phone.

In today’s world, true knowledge is revered.

These are people who take the time to fill their brains with knowledge, and they’re admired and respected in both their jobs and social circles because of it. Knowledge becomes a signal of something more important than just “smarts.” It shows focus, discipline, curiosity. Qualities that matter even more when AI is doing the grunt work and humans are competing for everything else.

If you want your kid to thrive in this economy, their knowledge base needs to be robust.

Raise your children to know things

Please don’t be tricked into thinking that knowledge is too cheap for your kid to acquire.

Yes, they carry every fact ever known to humans in their pocket. Yes, they can access the minds of our greatest scientists, writers, mathematicians, and historians with a swipe of their thumb.

But if your kid only ever depends on the minds of others, they will never be able to unlock their own.

Kids can’t “collaborate” or “think critically” if they don’t have a fact base. They can’t “think outside the box” if they don’t know what kind of box they’re in. They can’t creatively “break the rules” if they don’t know the rules to begin with.

Your job, starting tomorrow, is simple. Fill your kid’s head with ideas, concepts, facts, and real knowledge. Here’s how.

Build the Base

  • Memorize something each month. (EX: States, capitals, the periodic table, presidents, quotes from The Hunger Games, bones of the body.)
  • Use the dinner table. (EX: Trivia, “what did you learn today,” conversations that require critical thinking.)
  • Go deep on one thing. (EX: Chess, birds, NBA history, marine biology.)
  • Make it come to life. (EX: Museums, battlefields, farms, aquariums.)

Use AI the Right Way

  • Tutor mode, not answer mode. Ask AI to quiz, explain, or generate practice questions. But never just hand over the answer.
  • Create first, then prompt. If your kid wants AI feedback on a project, make sure they create the project themselves. Then ask AI for feedback. Never the reverse.
  • No AI for foundational memorization. Things like times tables, vocab, and dates need to live in the brain, not the cloud.
  • Fact-check it together. Ask AI something your kid already knows and watch them catch the mistakes. That’s training in AI literacy.

Information is everywhere, but knowledge is rare. So raise your kid to have knowledge. Fill their head with facts (yes, even in the age of AI).

It’s key to helping them unleash their potential.

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