WELCOME TO CHATEAU DU MER BEACH RESORT

If this is your first time in my site, welcome! Chateau Du Mer is a beach house and a Conference Hall. The beach house could now accommodate 10 guests, six in the main floor and four in the first floor( air conditioned room). In addition, you can now reserve your vacation dates ahead and pay the rental fees via PayPal. I hope to see you soon in Marinduque- Home of the Morions and Heart of the Philippines. The photo above was taken during our first Garden Wedding ceremony at The Chateau Du Mer Gardens. I have also posted my favorite Filipino and American dishes and recipes in this site. Some of the photos and videos on this site, I do not own, but I have no intention on the infringement of your copyrights!

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands
View of Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands-Click on photo to link to Marinduque Awaits You

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

My Granddaughter's Graduation and the Age of AI

Degrees of Uncertainty: A Granddaughter, A Generation, and the Age of AI

Carenna Katague Thompson- My Youngest Grand Daughter, B.S. Graduation, GWU 💚Summa Cum Laude, May 2026. 

I will be attending her Graduation In Washington DC in two weeks. A super proud Lolo ( Grand Pa), indeed.  

Carenna, my youngest granddaughter will walk across the stage, diploma in hand, marking the end of one chapter and the uncertain beginning of another in two weeks.   It is a proud moment for our family, one of those milestones that reminds you how quickly time moves and how each generation must find its own footing in a world that never stands still.

But unlike many graduates of the past, she steps into a labor market shaped not just by economic cycles, but by something far more unpredictable: artificial intelligence.

So far, she has no job prospects. And rather than rush into a workforce that feels unclear and unsettled, she has made a thoughtful decision, to continue her education, pursue a master’s degree, and ultimately aim for a Ph.D. Her goal is simple and admirable: she wants to teach at a college or university.

In another era, this path would feel straightforward. Today, it feels like both a commitment and a question mark. 

https://www.linkedin.com/in/carennakt2025/

When Evidence Lags Behind Reality

We are told that AI’s impact on jobs is still largely theoretical, debated in economics papers, modeled in forecasts, and argued over in academic circles. The hard evidence, they say, is still catching up.

But young people like my granddaughter are not living in theory. They are making real decisions now-about careers, education, and their futures, without the luxury of waiting for certainty.

Some of her peers are turning toward blue-collar trades, seeking stability in work that remains grounded in the physical world. Others are embracing AI, learning to code, to prompt, to adapt, hoping to ride the wave rather than be swept aside.

And then there are those like her choosing to go deeper into academia, into knowledge itself, believing that teaching, critical thinking, and human understanding will always have a place in society. It is a quiet act of faith.

The Changing Value of a Lifetime of Learning

When I think back to my own journey, from my years at the FDA to my life as a writer and observer of the world education was always seen as a foundation. You built upon it, but it was not something you had to constantly defend.

Today, that foundation feels less solid.

AI is beginning to challenge not only how we work, but how we learn and even what it means to be an expert. When information is instantly accessible, when machines can generate essays, analyze data, and even simulate reasoning, what becomes of the traditional role of a teacher?

It is a fair question. But perhaps the answer lies not in what AI can do, but in what it cannot fully replace: mentorship, lived experience, ethical judgment, and the human connection that turns information into understanding.

A good teacher does not simply transfer knowledge. They shape minds. They challenge assumptions. They inspire curiosity.

No algorithm, at least for now, can replicate that fully.

The Illusion of “Safe” Choices

There is a growing belief among young people that certain career paths might offer protection from AI-whether in the trades, entrepreneurship, or academia.

I am not entirely convinced. If there is one lesson history has taught us, it is that no field remains untouched by technological change. The timeline may differ, the impact may vary, but the direction is consistent.

Even academia is not immune. AI is already influencing how students learn, how research is conducted, and how knowledge is shared.

So perhaps the goal should not be to find a “safe” path, but to become adaptable within whatever path one chooses.

If my granddaughter becomes a professor someday, her success may depend not just on what she teaches, but on how she integrates new tools, challenges new realities, and prepares her students for a world that continues to evolve.

A Grandfather’s Reflection

As I watch her prepare for graduation, I am reminded that every generation faces its own version of uncertainty.

Mine had its own turning points-moments when the future felt unclear, when decisions had to be made without complete information. And yet, somehow, we moved forward. We adapted. We found our way.

Her journey will be different. Perhaps more complex. Certainly more intertwined with technology than anything I experienced.

But the core questions remain the same: What kind of life do you want to build?

What kind of impact do you want to have? And how will you adapt when the world inevitably changes?

Hope in the Midst of Uncertainty

There is something deeply reassuring about her choice. In a time when machines are becoming more capable, she is choosing a path centered on human growth, learning, and connection. She is choosing to teach, to contribute to the development of others.

That, to me, is not a retreat from the future. It is an investment in it.

Because no matter how advanced AI becomes, society will always need people who can guide, interpret, question, and inspire.

Final Thoughts

AI may reshape the workplace. It may redefine careers. It may even challenge long-held assumptions about education and expertise. But it does not eliminate the need for purpose.

As my granddaughter takes her next steps into graduate school, into deeper study, into an uncertain but promising future, I find myself not worried, but reflective.

The path ahead may not be clear. But then again, it never really was. And perhaps that is the most important lesson of all. Uncertainty is not something to fear.

It is something to navigate. And if history is any guide, she and her generation will find their way, just as we once did.

Carenna Education: 


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