By Huileng Tan
Publication Date: 2026-05-26 04:44:00
Parents shouldn’t obsess over what their kids study in the era of artificial intelligence, said Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang.
“I think that it won’t matter. All the things that used to matter are still things that are going to matter in the future,” Huang told Singapore’s Channel NewsAsia on Monday.
Instead of chasing AI-proof subjects, students should focus on using AI to deepen their learning and improve their craft, Huang said.
The Nvidia chief pointed to journalism, storytelling, the arts, and design as examples of fields that will remain valuable even as AI becomes more powerful. He pointed out the best interviewers are not just well prepared, but able to stay present, listen closely, and respond dynamically in the moment.
“The ability to tell a story for an audience will remain just as important in the future as it is today,” Huang said.
The Nvidia chief also referenced the Japanese concept of “wabi-sabi,” or the beauty of imperfection, suggesting that uniquely human qualities could become even more prized in an AI-saturated world.
“Whatever you decide is your passion, the only one thing that you have to do is to make sure that you ask yourself: How can AI help elevate my learning, my craft, my purpose?” he said.
Huang is the latest business leader to weigh in on how AI could reshape education and work.
Earlier this month, futurist and entrepreneur Peter…