Abstract
Rapid advances in AI, automation, and hyperconnectivity are outpacing human habits, producing pervasive ambiguity. Drawing on John Dewey’s philosophy of habit as growth through disruption and inquiry, this paper reconceptualizes cybersecurity education as cultivating reflective, cyber-attuned habits across society—not only training specialists. Dewey’s account of growth through disruption, inquiry, and reorganization are translated into three educational design moves: (1) embed reflective inquiry within procedural exercises; (2) employ inquiry-based, experiential formats (e.g., capture-the-flag, cyber-defense exercises, cyber-ranges) to practice reasoning under uncertainty; and (3) extend learning to social practices of verification and shared deliberation beyond technical settings. The approach turns error into material for growth and equips learners to act with intelligent adaptability. Rather than proposing a fixed framework, the paper offers a conceptual position grounded in Deweyan philosophy, highlighting design implications that can inform educational practice across varied contexts.
Open Access License Notice:
This article is © its author(s) and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0). Beginning with Volume 13 (2026), this license is included directly within all published PDFs. For earlier articles, a cover page has been added to indicate the correct licensing terms. Any legacy copyright or pricing statements appearing within the PDF reflect prior print production workflows and do not represent the Journal’s current open access policy. For full details, please see the Journal’s License Terms.