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Your career needs a ‘gym membership’ to keep up with continuous AI advancements, says Campus founder Tade Oyerinde

June 9, 2026
in News
Your career needs a ‘gym membership’ to keep up with continuous AI advancements, says Campus founder Tade Oyerinde

The days of learning a skill once and coasting on it for life are over. The new reality, according to AI Campus founder and chancellor Tade Oyerinde, looks a lot like a New York City gym before summer.

Speaking during the first day of the 25th annual Fortune Brainstorm Tech conference in Aspen, Colorado on Monday, Oyerinde posited that AI’s rapid pace of improvement has permanently changed the calculus of education—no matter where you are in your career. All that scrambling to deploy AI that companies and executives are doing right now? That’s not a one-time project that will suddenly reach a final resolution once and for all, said Oyerinde

“I’m sorry if you’re exhausted,” Oyerinde told the audience. “You’re going to have to do that every year for the rest of your careers, ad infinitum.” 

He predicts organizations will soon staff permanent “continuous learning, continuous development, continuous evaluation” departments, as standard as operations or finance. And with AI models now approaching recursive self-improvement—where each version helps build the next—the curve will only get steeper.

“The era of learn once and then you’re done for life is over,” Oyerinde said. “We’re going to have this exponential takeoff.”

Which brings us to the gym, another place where consistency matters. Just like “everyone in New York wants to be hot and fit for the summer” and puts in two or three hours a week to get there, Oyerinde said, staying competitive at work will demand the same dedication and focus.

“If you want to be the equivalent of hot and fit in your career, you’re going to have to spend two or three hours a week learning how to use the most recent advances in AI.”

A faster, smarter way to learn

The reframing of continuous education as maintenance rather than a single milestone also applies to the traditional thinking around the way schools and curriculums are designed and built. Colleges and universities often take the same approach for vastly diverse student bodies. Instead, AI can map each student’s knowledge at an “atomic level” and route them through custom pathways, letting strong students skip ahead while others work on other gaps, explained Oyerinde.

The result, he claims, is teaching people “about five times faster.” That was the rationale for Campus’s 2025 acquisition of Sizzle AI, a learning startup founded by Meta’s former AI chief Jerome Pesenti.

Hadi Partovi, who founded Code.org 13 years ago, recently renamed it to CodeAI to reflect the evolution in coding. The org has focused on helping students learn the basics of computer science and the technology remaking their world. Now that mission has fully embraced coding and AI.

Every student, said Partovi, needs to grasp how AI actually works, then learn to build with it, and to use it responsibly.


More from Fortune’s 25th Brainstorm Tech:

Anthropic’s Boris Cherny, creator of Claude Code, says there are days he manages tens of thousands of AI agents at once


“This is the most powerful technology that mankind has ever created, and anybody has access to that power,” he said.

Partovi described himself as a “cautious optimist,” but suggests not treating AI as “this magic thing that’s been created from above.” Instead, it’s something humans have developed and everyone should help shape it. That applies to curriculum and learning to code, too.

However, just because AI can read, write, and do math, doesn’t mean schools will stop teaching it, noted Partovi. But the rote parts of coding, he said, like memorizing where semicolons and brackets go, no longer matter. What will continue to be important is computational thinking, logic, planning, and problem-solving.

“I also think we need to start questioning what students should learn,” said Partovi. “My guess is nobody here in this room uses calculus day to day, and no employer or almost no employer except maybe SpaceX or a few other places, but mostly nobody is hiring the calculus experts. But every student is struggling and thinking they need to get really good at it for almost no purpose whatsoever.”

And as education is pushed to evolve given the way AI is reshaping learning and job opportunities, there’s a need for faster evolution to the way learning takes place.

“The gap between what’s relevant and what schools are teaching is growing as fast as the AI models are changing,” said Oyerinde.

And as students and companies adapt to the need for continuous new knowledge about AI, the thinking applies to those who are well beyond school or prime executive age. Karin Klein, founding partner at venture firm Bloomberg Beta, said AI can benefit all rather than a few. Klein participates in “talking circles” with icon Gloria Steinem, who is a lifelong learner.

“At 92, Gloria’s still learning,” said Klein. “I taught her how to use AI about a year and a half ago, so we all have no excuses, right?”

The post Your career needs a ‘gym membership’ to keep up with continuous AI advancements, says Campus founder Tade Oyerinde appeared first on Fortune.

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