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B2 Adult Interactive Reading Lesson

AI and the future of work

How artificial intelligence is reshaping jobs, daily life, and the skills you need to thrive

In this lesson, you will read a journalistic article about artificial intelligence and its growing impact on the workplace and everyday life. You will explore 20 key B2-level vocabulary items, practise your reading comprehension, and respond to thought-provoking discussion questions. Grammar, preposition, and homework tasks will help you consolidate and apply what you have learned.

AI and the future of work cover image

Vocabulary

Click each card to flip it and explore the full definition, example, and synonym.

artificial intelligence
noun
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Definition

The ability of computer systems to perform tasks that normally require human intelligence, such as learning, reasoning, and problem-solving.

Example

"Artificial intelligence is being used to detect diseases earlier than human doctors can."

Synonym

machine intelligence, AI, machine learning

diagnose
verb
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Definition

To identify the nature of an illness, problem, or fault by examining symptoms or characteristics.

Example

"Doctors can now use AI software to diagnose certain cancers from scan images."

Synonym

identify, detect, determine

transformation
noun
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Definition

A thorough or dramatic change in form, appearance, nature, or character.

Example

"The transformation of the publishing industry due to digital technology took less than a decade."

Synonym

change, revolution, overhaul

repetitive
adjective
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Definition

Characterised by frequent repetition of the same action or element; tediously similar from one occasion to the next.

Example

"Factory workers often perform repetitive tasks that robots can now do more efficiently."

Synonym

monotonous, routine, mechanical

automated
adjective
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Definition

Operated or controlled by machines or computers, with little or no human involvement.

Example

"The warehouse is almost fully automated — only a few human supervisors remain."

Synonym

mechanised, computerised, robotic

algorithm
noun
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Definition

A set of rules or step-by-step instructions followed by a computer to solve a problem or complete a task.

Example

"The recommendation algorithm learned my preferences and now suggests films I actually enjoy."

Synonym

procedure, formula, program

counterpart
noun
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Definition

A person or thing that has the same function or characteristics as another in a different place or situation.

Example

"The British minister met with her French counterpart to discuss trade policy."

Synonym

equivalent, parallel, match

adaptability
noun
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Definition

The quality of being able to adjust to new conditions or circumstances quickly and effectively.

Example

"In a rapidly changing job market, adaptability is more valuable than any single skill."

Synonym

flexibility, versatility, resilience

disruption
noun
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Definition

A major disturbance or interruption to an established system, market, or process, often caused by new technology or events.

Example

"The disruption caused by streaming services destroyed the DVD rental industry almost overnight."

Synonym

upheaval, disturbance, interference

precedent
noun
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Definition

An earlier event or action that serves as an example or guide to be considered in similar future situations.

Example

"The court's ruling set a legal precedent that affected thousands of similar cases."

Synonym

example, model, benchmark

displace
verb
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Definition

To force someone or something out of their usual place or position, often by taking their role or replacing them.

Example

"Many truck drivers fear they will be displaced by self-driving vehicles within a decade."

Synonym

replace, oust, supplant

unsettling
adjective
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Definition

Causing anxiety, discomfort, or a sense of unease; slightly disturbing or worrying.

Example

"It was unsettling to discover that the app had been tracking my location for months."

Synonym

disturbing, disquieting, troubling

embedded
adjective
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Definition

Firmly and deeply fixed in a surrounding mass or environment; fully integrated into something so it is hard to remove.

Example

"Surveillance cameras have become so embedded in city life that most people no longer notice them."

Synonym

integrated, ingrained, built-in

intensify
verb
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Definition

To become or make more intense, stronger, or more extreme in degree or force.

Example

"Public debate about data privacy has intensified since the new facial recognition law was passed."

Synonym

increase, strengthen, escalate

regulator
noun
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Definition

A person or official body that supervises a particular industry or activity and ensures rules and standards are followed.

Example

"Financial regulators fined the bank for failing to protect customer data."

Synonym

supervisor, authority, watchdog

significance
noun
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Definition

The quality of being worthy of attention; importance, meaning, or consequence.

Example

"The significance of the discovery was not fully understood until years later."

Synonym

importance, meaning, weight

navigate
verb
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Definition

To find one's way through a complex or difficult situation or environment; to steer through challenges successfully.

Example

"New graduates must learn to navigate a job market that is changing faster than ever before."

Synonym

manage, steer, find one's way

flatmate
noun
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Definition

A person who shares a flat or apartment with others but is not a family member.

Example

"My flatmate works night shifts, so we rarely see each other during the week."

Synonym

housemate, roommate, co-resident

chatbot
noun
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Definition

A computer program designed to simulate conversation with human users, especially over the internet or via messaging apps.

Example

"The company replaced its phone helpline with a chatbot that answers questions instantly."

Synonym

virtual assistant, conversational agent, bot

recommendation
noun
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Definition

A suggestion or proposal as to the best course of action; an endorsement of something as being good or suitable.

Example

"The algorithm's recommendation was so accurate that I bought the book within minutes."

Synonym

suggestion, advice, proposal

Reading

Read the article and explore the highlighted vocabulary. Use the controls to listen as you read.

Not long ago, the idea of a machine writing your emails, diagnosingto identify an illness or problem your illness, or driving you to work belonged firmly in the realm of science fiction. Today, artificial intelligencecomputer systems that think like humans has quietly moved in — like a very efficient flatmatesomeone you share a home with who never leaves dishes in the sink. From customer service chatbotscomputer programs that chat like people to medical imaging software, AI is no longer a distant promise but a daily reality for millions of people around the world.

The workplace has been one of the most dramatic arenas for this transformationa thorough and dramatic change. Repetitivethe same thing done again and again tasks that once consumed hours of human effort are now being automateddone by machines, not people at remarkable speed. Data entry, scheduling, and even basic legal research have been taken over by algorithmssets of computer instructions that work faster and, arguably, more accurately than their human counterpartspeople doing the same job elsewhere. Entire industries are being reshaped, and workers are finding that adaptabilitythe ability to change easily has become the most valuable professional skill of the twenty-first century.

Not all the news is alarming, however. While some jobs have disappeared, new roles have emerged that simply did not exist a decade ago — prompt engineers, AI trainers, and data ethicists among them. Economists argue that technological disruptiona big change that causes disorder has always created more jobs than it destroys, pointing to the industrial revolution as a reassuring precedentan earlier example to follow. The challenge, of course, is that the workers displacedpushed out of their jobs by one wave of change are rarely the same people who ride the next one.

Beyond the office, AI has begun to reshape daily life in ways both convenient and quietly unsettlingslightly worrying or disturbing. Recommendationa suggestion of something good algorithms decide what we watch, read, and buy; facial recognition software unlocks our phones in milliseconds; and smart home devices have made it perfectly normal to argue with a cylinder in your kitchen. Privacy concerns have intensifiedbecome stronger or more extreme as the technology becomes more embeddeddeeply fixed and built into something in everyday existence, prompting governments and regulatorsofficials who enforce rules around the world to act.

For language learners, this technological revolution carries particular significanceimportance and meaning. Many of the fastest-growing careers require strong communication skills in English — from collaborating with international teams to interpreting AI-generated reports. Understanding how these changes are unfolding is not merely academic; it is increasingly essential for navigatingfinding your way through challenges the world of work that awaits you.

Discussion

Think carefully and write your answers. There are no right or wrong responses — use your own ideas and experience.

Vocabulary Check

Choose the best answer for each question.

1. Which word means "a set of computer instructions used to solve a problem"?

2. The factory workers were ___ by robots — they lost their jobs.

3. Her ___ in the Paris office does exactly the same job as she does in London.

4. The spread of AI caused a major ___ in the publishing industry.

5. Which adjective describes a task done the same way, over and over again?

6. The doctor was able to ___ the illness quickly using new AI software.

7. The industrial revolution is used as a ___ to show that technology creates jobs.

8. AI is now deeply ___ in everyday life — it is almost impossible to avoid.

9. The government asked ___ to investigate the company's use of personal data.

10. Her ability to learn new software quickly showed great ___.

11. Privacy concerns have ___ since the new facial recognition law was introduced.

12. The ___ of the AI revolution for language learners is enormous.

13. Young workers need to ___ a job market that changes very quickly.

14. The company replaced its phone helpline with a ___ that answers questions online.

15. The streaming platform's ___ suggested ten films I had never heard of but loved.

Grammar Practice

Complete each sentence or task. Click "Show Answers" to check your work.

Data entry and scheduling have been taken over by algorithms.
has become (present perfect)
AI, which is no longer a distant promise, is a daily reality for millions.
Example: If AI replaced all human workers, society would need to rethink how people earn a living.
The economist said that AI would create more jobs than it destroyed.
However, / Nevertheless, / At the same time, / On the other hand, — all acceptable.

Prepositions

Choose the correct preposition to complete each sentence.

1. AI has moved ___ our daily lives in a very short time.

2. Data entry has been taken ___ by automated systems.

3. Economists point ___ the industrial revolution as a reassuring precedent.

4. Privacy concerns have intensified ___ the technology became more embedded.

5. This revolution carries particular significance ___ language learners.

6. Workers must learn to navigate ___ a rapidly changing job market.

Homework

Complete these tasks after class. Use a dictionary if needed.

Finish the Sentence

Complete each sentence in a logical and grammatically correct way.

Model: …we now interact with AI-powered systems every day without always realising it.
Model: …technology is changing jobs so quickly that workers must be able to learn new skills constantly.
Model: …new roles such as AI trainer, prompt engineer, and data ethicist have also been created.
Model: …AI-powered systems began collecting and analysing large amounts of personal data.
Model: …many of the fastest-growing careers require strong English communication skills in technology-driven workplaces.
Model: …technological disruption ultimately creates more jobs than it destroys, even if the transition is painful.

Tenses

Write the verb in brackets in the correct tense.

will have replaced (future perfect)
are struggling (present continuous)
had existed (past perfect)
do not invest / don't invest (present simple in conditional)
had recommended (past perfect)
was passed (past simple passive)

Vocabulary in Context

Choose the correct word from the box to complete each sentence.

algorithmdisruptionprecedentregulatorsnavigateembedded

1. The streaming platform's ___ suggested ten films I had never heard of but loved.

2. The sudden ___ caused by AI forced many workers to retrain quickly.

3. This case will set a ___ for how courts deal with AI-related lawsuits in future.

4. Technology ___ have warned companies to be more transparent about how they use data.

5. It can be hard to ___ the complex rules and expectations of a new industry.

6. AI is now so deeply ___ in our phones that we use it without thinking about it.