Life in our digital, robotic age is great. The Roomba vacuums for you. Cars can navigate and drive themselves. You can print your own 3D products, have an interactive smart home, or da Vinci-assisted surgery. Electronic devices have also revolutionized classrooms and instruction. The Internet of Things and the explosion of computer processing capability have us feeling powerful, pampered, more efficient, and more advanced. Students will now grow up learning and working in environments with machinery that learns and thinks as well. Machine learning is already here—automating processes and extracting patterns from big data, then making predictions and decisions. Machine learning algorithms are lightning-fast and complex, but they have flaws and problems too.