Why Pedagogy, Not Technology, Must Lead the Future of AI-Enabled Education

Fatiha Bazouche

As AI becomes embedded in education systems, the central challenge is not technological adoption, but pedagogical intention. Countries with limited resources should prioritise AI literacy and ethical awareness over rapid implementation, shared Fatiha Bazouche, PhD Candidate (ABD) | Instructional Technology, Ohio University, United States in an exclusive interaction with Kaanchi Chawla of Elets News Network (ENN). Edited excerpts:

In many countries, hybrid and online learning have expanded rapidly, yet access and teaching quality remain unequal. From your perspective, what global policies should institutions adopt to ensure both equity and instructional quality in hybrid learning environments?

The global expansion of hybrid and online learning has made one reality unmistakably clear: equity and instructional quality are inseparable. Policies that focus only on access risk reproducing inequality, while those focused solely on quality often exclude marginalised learners. To address this, institutions must adopt equity-by-design policies that embed accessibility, inclusion, and instructional rigor into the core of hybrid learning systems.

At a global level, institutions should mandate universal design for learning (UDL) standards, enforce accessibility compliance, and invest in low-bandwidth and mobile-first learning solutions. Equally critical is sustained investment in faculty professional development centered on evidence-based instructional design models that promote active learning, feedback, and higher-order thinking. Quality assurance frameworks must move beyond course completion rates to evaluate cognitive engagement, learning transfer, and critical thinking development, ensuring that hybrid learning is transformative rather than transactional.

What lessons can higher-education systems in the Global South learn from research and practice in the U.S. and Europe regarding hybrid learning design and vice-versa?

Higher-education systems in the Global South can benefit from research and practice in the U.S. and Europe related to systematic instructional design, learning analytics, and structured hybrid course models. These systems demonstrate how intentional design rather than content digitisation can enhance learner engagement and outcomes.

However, the knowledge exchange must be reciprocal. Institutions in the U.S. and Europe have much to learn from the Global South’s emphasis on contextual relevance, community-centered learning, and pedagogical adaptability. Many global south institutions innovate under significant constraints, demonstrating that meaningful learning does not depend on advanced technology alone, but on purposeful pedagogy, cultural responsiveness, and human connection. True global progress in hybrid learning requires mutual respect and co-creation rather than one-directional knowledge transfer.

With AI becoming integral to educational systems, how can countries with limited technological resources prepare educators and students to use AI responsibly for developing critical thinking skills rather than replacing them?

As AI becomes embedded in education systems, the central challenge is not technological adoption, but pedagogical intention. Countries with limited resources should prioritise AI literacy and ethical awareness over rapid implementation. Educators and students must understand how AI generates outputs, where bias may exist, and why human judgment remains essential.

AI should be framed as a cognitive partner rather than a cognitive substitute. Even low-cost or open-source AI tools can support critical thinking when they are used to question assumptions, analyse multiple perspectives, generate counterarguments, and encourage reflection on problem-solving processes. When embedded within structured learning sequences, AI can guide learners from foundational understanding to application, reflection, and ultimately knowledge creation, strengthening critical thinking rather than diminishing it.

At the policy level, frameworks should emphasize transparency, academic integrity, and responsible use, ensuring that AI enhances learners’ reasoning, metacognition, and ethical decision-making rather than replacing intellectual effort

Gamification is being used globally in education at different scales. How can instructional designers ensure that game-based learning strategies are both culturally relevant and pedagogically meaningful across diverse learner populations?

Game-based learning holds global promise, but only when it is grounded in pedagogical purpose and cultural relevance. Instructional designers must move beyond generic gamification mechanics and begin with learner context analysis, incorporating local narratives, social realities, and cultural values into game scenarios. Pedagogical meaning emerges when games are aligned with learning outcomes that require analysis, evaluation, and reflection. Well-designed game-based learning environments encourage learners to justify decisions, examine consequences, and reflect on strategies transforming games into spaces for critical inquiry rather than superficial engagement. Inclusive and accessible design further ensures that game-based learning supports diverse learners across cultural, linguistic, and ability contexts.

Also Read: From Classrooms to Communities How Sairam Institutions is Redefining Purpose-Driven Education

Looking ahead to the next decade, what global trends in instructional design and educational technology excite you the most and what challenges do you think the world still needs to overcome?

Looking ahead to the next decade, the most promising developments in instructional design lie in human-centered learning experience design, AI-supported scaffolding, and assessment models that value critical thinking, creativity, and ethical reasoning. The growing shift toward competency-based education, micro-learning, and flexible hybrid ecosystems has the potential to democratise learning worldwide, provided these innovations are guided by sound pedagogy rather than technology alone.

Equally important is the emergence of structured learning progressions that intentionally guide learners from foundational understanding to higher-order thinking, reflection, and knowledge creation. When thoughtfully designed, AI can function as a scaffold for critical thinking supporting analysis, reflection, and ethical judgment rather than replacing human reasoning.

Despite these advances, persistent challenges remain. Digital inequities, uneven faculty preparation, and the uncritical adoption of emerging technologies continue to threaten educational quality. The future of instructional design depends on resisting technology-driven solutions and instead advancing pedagogy-driven innovation grounded in equity, intentional design, and sustained professional learning. Ultimately, the future of education will not be defined by technology itself, but by how deliberately we design learning experiences that place human thinking, ethical responsibility, and equity at the center.

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