Jobs and AI Access
What Future Jobs and the AI Divide Mean for Davao Families
A simple guide for Davao families who want to understand future jobs, AI access, and the next small learning step.
2026-06-02 · 4 min read · Parents, teens, adult learners, community builders
You may be wondering what AI means for your child, your work, or the skills your family should learn next. You do not need to solve the whole future today. Start with one clear question: what skill would make life, school, or work a little easier this month?
What to remember
- Future jobs are not only about jobs disappearing. Many jobs may change, and some new roles may appear.
- Your family does not need every tech skill at once. Start with one useful skill and build from there.
- Chewey School earns trust by organizing confirmed links carefully and reminding families to check details directly.
Start with the family question, not the big headline
Most parents are not asking for a jobs report lecture. They are asking, Will my child still need coding? Should I learn AI for work? Which class is worth our time?
The World Economic Forum says global job market shifts could create 170 million new roles by 2030 while displacing 92 million others, for a net gain of 78 million jobs. The helpful lesson is simple: work can change in more than one direction at the same time.
Skills at home can grow in small steps
A teen who tries coding or robotics learns more than a tool. They practice testing, fixing, explaining, and trying again. A parent who learns AI or digital business tools practices asking better questions and checking an answer before trusting it.
The report names fast-growing skills such as AI, big data, cybersecurity, and networks. It also names human skills like analytical thinking, resilience, flexibility, leadership, collaboration, and creative thinking. Your family needs both: useful tools and good judgment.
The AI divide can feel local
Another World Economic Forum article warns that AI benefits can stay concentrated in places with stronger infrastructure, data, investment, and talent pipelines. A family can have an AI tool and still feel unsure about what to learn or who to trust.
This is why local guidance matters. Chewey School is not trying to promise one perfect path. It is building a careful Davao starting map with confirmed class links, course links, communities, and reminders to verify details before joining.
One clear path is enough for now
You do not need to solve every future job question this month. Pick one path that fits the person in front of you: AI basics for a parent, robotics or coding for a child, digital business tools for a freelancer, or online skills for an adult learner.
Small steps build confidence. After that, choosing the next class or asking the next question feels less overwhelming.