Over the past two years, AI tools have permeated daily life at an astonishing pace. ChatGPT, Midjourney, Copilot... these terms are already familiar to teenagers.
However, observing the current state of AI education reveals a common phenomenon: most children's use of AI remains at a superficial "question-and-answer" level, and very few can actually use AI to solve real-world problems or complete full projects.
The reason is not hard to understand—the more powerful the tool, the higher the demand for the user's "systematic thinking." AI will not automatically provide business insights, will not help you conduct user research, and will certainly not face real-world challenges for you.
It's just an amplifier, amplifying the user's inherent thinking and execution abilities.
This raises a crucial question:
How to help teenagers overcome...
"Knowing what AI can do" versus "Using AI to create something"
The gap between them?

The AI+ Business Incubation Summer Camp offers a valuable solution for teenagers and their parents. Its uniqueness lies not in common labels like "visits to prestigious schools" or "lectures by renowned professors," but in its design of a complete "creative closed loop":

Students will use AI tools to conduct competitor analysis, create user profiles, and conduct financial simulations, building a complete business model from scratch. This is not a simulation exercise, but a real-world, problem-oriented practical exercise—ideas must withstand scrutiny.

Step into technology and finance companies like BrainCo and Morgan Stanley to observe firsthand how technology and capital drive the business world. Afterward, students will develop their solutions into demonstrable product prototypes and present them on a real pitch stage to judges and peers.
The ages of 12-17 are the golden period for the formation of thinking patterns. What one is exposed to and does during this stage often determines the starting point of one's cognition for the next ten years.
If children passively absorb knowledge, AI is just another subject; but if they can actively use AI to create value, they are more likely to become shapers of future industries rather than bystanders.
In an era where AI is reshaping everything
In an era where AI is reshaping everything
Discover a 12-day "Creative Journey" from New York to Boston.







