I an doing a debate and I want some ideas of what people think, since my team sucks and I have to do the work for them. I am proposition, so we say yes it will.
I suppose this could happen if the technology is perfected and the quality of teachers overall becomes a concern. I don't see it happening in this lifetime though.
Your premise is faulty, children are not born with a natural ability to use computers and they will always have to have teachers to enable them to do so, as well as to teach them to read and write and understand basic maths. After that..well, some people are never going to be very able with computers even though they might have the iq of Einstein..a computer is an external tool, after all, and even those who excel in its use may sometimes require the assistance of another human being.
On the other hand, if you begin by acknowledging all of this and then go on to argue that for those who find the tool a useful one it will allow them to study at their own pace, to free up the teaching resources that others need and to have access to the latest information in their subjects. The use of computers for learning would, at best, give students access to a far larger body of information in general than a class room ever could and would do away with the difficulties they can suffer from the different standards of teaching they would otherwise have to endure in a traditional classroom.
With computer driven education for some and computer assisted education for most of the others, there would be a need for fewer and fewer teachers and more money to pay for excellence in those that remained a necessary part of the system.