The distinction between process and product is the core pedagogical insight the AI age forces educators to confront. Traditional assessment measured products — the completed homework, the essay, the solution. The assumption was that adequate product implied adequate process: a student who produced the work had done the cognitive work of producing it. AI breaks the assumption. The product can be identical while the process that would have produced it in the pre-AI era is absent.
The transfer deficit sharpens the homework question. A child who reads AI-generated mathematics solutions may develop the ability to recognize correct solutions — useful, but not the same skill as generating solutions through sustained effort. The generative capacity requires the conditions AI assistance eliminates.
The cultural difficulty of the homework question is that the adult world reinforces a product orientation. Workplaces measure output. Educational institutions measure grades. The culture valorizes efficiency. A parent who tells a child that the struggle is more valuable than the result makes a claim the child's entire social environment contradicts. Christakis's framework supplies the empirical backing for that claim, but the empirical backing does not translate easily into twelve-year-old persuasion.
Byung-Chul Han's critique of smoothness operates in philosophical register; Christakis's critique of frictionlessness operates in developmental-biological register. They arrive at the same prescription through different routes. The friction Han mourns is the friction that builds the cognitive infrastructure on which all subsequent depth depends.
The question scene in You On AI and the developmental analysis in this volume. The pedagogical principle has older roots in Dewey's experiential-learning framework and in the cognitive-load tradition from John Sweller onward.
Process over product. The developmental value of homework lies in the cognitive operations it requires, not in the completed artifact.
Identical outputs, different exercises. AI-assisted and unassisted homework produce identical grades but categorically different developmental experiences.
Transfer deficit applies. Competence in the AI-assisted condition does not imply competence in the unassisted condition the child will also need to inhabit.
Cultural headwind. The child lives in a product-measuring culture; the developmental case for process is structurally unpersuasive at twelve.
Neurological grounding. Working memory, inhibitory control, and cognitive flexibility develop through exactly the operations AI-assisted homework eliminates.
Educators divide on whether the pedagogical response should be to eliminate AI from homework, to integrate AI explicitly into homework design while assessing unassisted capacity separately, or to shift assessment toward oral examination and in-class work. The empirical evidence favors some version of the integrated approach, but implementation challenges are severe and curricular reform moves more slowly than the technology.