Creative education must return to first principles in the age of artificial intelligence

AI produces polished work in seconds, but the Academy of Sound Engineering warns this masks poor learning. Students need foundational skills to judge output.

Categorized in: AI News Creatives
Published on: Jun 29, 2026
Creative education must return to first principles in the age of artificial intelligence

The debate around AI in education often starts with questions about bans and policies. A more fundamental test is whether learning has actually taken place, a point stressed by the Academy of Sound Engineering. AI can produce a polished document or a research outline in seconds, but speed and appearance are not evidence of understanding. A finished-looking output tells us what the tool can do, not what the student has learnt.

This is not a new challenge. The typewriter changed how students produced work; Google changed how they searched. AI is another step in that evolution. Pretending it does not exist is pointless because students are already using it. The real question is whether they have enough knowledge to judge what it gives them.

The real test of learning

One of the big misunderstandings about AI is that people treat it like magic. It is a calculation. It takes what has been fed into it and produces an approximation. In creative fields, the work is not only about structure or surface. It is about judgment, context, lived experience, and emotional intent. A student who understands music can listen to an AI-generated composition and hear where it fails. They can hear what is generic, unresolved, or disconnected. A student without that foundation may accept the output simply because it looks complete.

The same applies to written work. A student can submit something polished, but if they cannot explain the argument, defend the sources, or show how the ideas connect, the document tells us very little about their learning. In those cases, educators need to ask different questions: What did you discover? How did you get there? What do you now understand?

Why foundations matter in creative work

Used properly, AI can help. It can guide early thinking, provide structure, and remove some of the administrative burden from creative work. But it cannot replace the hard part of education, which is learning how to think through a field with enough depth to make informed decisions. As creative professionals explore how AI fits into their workflows, many turn to AI for Creatives Courses to better understand the balance between tool and craft.

This matters especially in South Africa. Much of the country's creative history, music knowledge, mythology, and cultural experience is not well documented online. When AI is asked about South African music or local creative traditions, the answers are often superficial because the depth of that knowledge still sits with people, communities, practitioners, and memory. If the knowledge is not documented, AI can only guess from what it has. If education abandons foundations for tools, it weakens what students need most. In music, sound, and production, students still need to understand scales, notation, acoustics, sound behaviour, performance, language, and creative process. Without those foundations, AI cannot elevate their work. It can only make weak work look more finished.

Education beyond content transfer

Education is not just content transfer. It is also socialisation, collaboration, debate, feedback, networking, and learning how to operate within a field. Assessment should ask whether the student can think, adapt, explain, and apply knowledge in context. Institutions developing AI for Education strategies must ensure they do not abandon the concepts that govern their industries or prevent students from encountering the innovations that shape them.

At the Academy of Sound Engineering, the responsibility is to protect that balance. As a smaller private institution, it can respond with agility. But agility should not mean chasing every tool at the expense of the principles that make learning durable. AI will become part of creative education. What matters now is whether institutions use it to deepen learning or allow it to disguise the absence of learning. If a student can use the tool, explain the process, challenge the output, and improve it through craft, learning has happened. If they cannot, the machine did not make them creative. It merely coloured in the numbers.

Why this matters for creatives

For creative professionals, the rise of AI tools does not diminish the need for deep craft knowledge. A designer who understands typography, a composer who knows harmony, or a writer who grasps narrative structure can use AI as an assistant rather than a crutch. The ability to judge, refine, and reject AI-generated work separates those with real expertise from those who simply accept what the machine produces. Investing in foundational skills-whether through formal education or self-directed learning-remains the surest way to ensure that AI serves the work, not the other way around.


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