Chatgpt’s learning model is here. It won’t solve the AI problem of education

school year Many students started soon, and Chatgpt announced a new “learning model” designed to prevent or at least encourage the adoption of homework shortcuts.
The pattern is designed around the Socrates approach, so when activated, OpenAI’s generative AI chatbot rejects direct answer requests and instead refers to open-ended questions to the user. The new research model is available for most logged in Chatgpt users, including users of the free version.
Over the past few years, Openai has severely damaged the education system and students have become the earliest adopters of Chatgpt. Even so, Openai claims that the robot is currently the overall boon for learners –if Asked to use role-playing as a synthesis teacher.
“When Chatgpt is prompted to teach or teach, it can greatly improve academic performance, but when it is used only as an answer machine, it can hinder learning.”
The problem is, no matter how attractive Chatgpt’s learning mode is when iterating through Openai’s iterations on this feature, it’s just clicking Chatgpt’s toggle, direct answers (and potentially fabricated), with content involving any course you’re doing. This may be difficult to resist for young users who are still developing the frontal lobe.
Indeed, hunting students are an easy way to avoid using the substance of the course, and they always have available resources such as cliff A series of literary abstracts. Nevertheless, the immediacy and personalized nature of chatbots is still escalating. Multiple AI-centric smartphone applications can solve homework problems with snapshots, such as Bytedance’s Gauth, where rockets become popular every time the school year restarts the course. Many educators have recently raised concerns about students’ use of AI and often secretly raise their concerns.
Openai CEO Sam Altman doesn’t buy it. “I remember when I was in school – Joogle came out first and all the teachers were frightened,” Altman said in a recent podcast. Similar to the internet and calculator, Altman’s sees AI as a tool that can help you “think better.”



