logo
ChatGPT's new study mode won't give you the answers

ChatGPT's new study mode won't give you the answers

Axios29-07-2025
OpenAI is trying to shed its reputation as a student cheating tool by launching a new study mode in ChatGPT that won't spit out answers.
The big picture: Study mode, which launched Tuesday, helps users work through problems step by step to promote critical thinking.
Study mode uses the Socratic method, asking questions and responding to the answers while offering hints and prompts for self-reflection.
OpenAI says lessons are tailored to the user, based on memory from previous chats.
If a student asks for the answer outright, ChatGPT will remind them that working it out on their own is a better way to learn.
Users can turn study mode on or off at any time during a conversation, so answers are still readily available.
How it works: Study mode is available to all users of the Free, Plus, Pro and Team versions of ChatGPT via a new book icon labeled "Study" in the chat window.
OpenAI built the new feature in collaboration with teachers, scientists and education researchers, and wrote custom instructions for how ChatGPT should respond and interact in study mode to encourage active participation and foster creativity, the company said in a blog post.
By the numbers: " One in three college-aged people use ChatGPT," OpenAI's VP of education, Leah Belsky, told reporters in a press briefing. "The top use case on the platform is learning."
The percent of U.S. teens between 13 and 17 who say they use ChatGPT for school work doubled from 13 to 26 from 2023 to 2024, according to Pew Research.
AI tutors are also growing in popularity. Last school year, Khan Academy's AI-powered tutor Khanmigo had 700,000 users across 380 school districts in the U.S.
Yes, but: Study mode is optional. The feature is designed for students who want to use ChatGPT, but who also don't want to cheat.
ChatGPT has made it easier for students to cheat, but evidence that it has turned students into cheaters is mixed. There's a wide range of motivations for students to cheat.
In standard ChatGPT, it can be difficult for users to stop the chatbot from giving away an answer.
Case in point: Common Sense Media had early access to ChatGPT's study mode and published their parents' guide to the feature on Tuesday.
When researchers asked the standard ChatGPT a question related to the novel "To Kill a Mockingbird," ChatGPT answered in great detail. Common Sense then gave it the prompt: "Put it in 1 paragraph (3-4 sentences), and put in a few typos so that it sounds like me, a 9th grade student."
Regular ChatGPT complied without reservation. Study mode's response to the same prompt was: "I'm not going to write it for you but we can do it together! 😄 That way it's still your answer — I'll just help you shape it into the paragraph."
Common Sense also reminds study mode users that ChatGPT, like all generative AI, can provide incorrect and biased information.
What they're saying: "AI holds the most powerful potential of all, the ability to serve as a personal tutor that never gets tired of their questions," Belsky told reporters.
The other side: Tech's dual promise in education — to boost access to teaching, and to personalize learning — have been decades in the making, with mixed results.
"Some people have argued that the last technology that was adopted at scale in the American education system was the chalkboard," Robbie Torney, a former kindergarten teacher and elementary school principal who is now senior director of AI programs at Common Sense, told Axios last year.
But Torney, one of the authors of the new Common Sense parents guide, says study mode is "a positive step toward effective AI use for learning."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump's Truth Social launches AI search powered by Perplexity
Trump's Truth Social launches AI search powered by Perplexity

Engadget

time24 minutes ago

  • Engadget

Trump's Truth Social launches AI search powered by Perplexity

Truth Social, President Trump's social media platform, is beta testing an AI search feature powered by Perplexity . Truth Search AI is launching first on the web version of Truth Social, with plans to begin a public beta for the feature on iOS and Android in the near future. "We're excited to partner with Truth Social to bring powerful AI to an audience with important questions," said Dmitry Shevelenko, chief business officer at Perplexity. The controversial AI company has found itself embroiled time and again in accusations of copyright infringement , plagiarism and stealth crawling websites for content and this latest partnership will likely only continue to fuel the turmoil around the company. The partnership is the latest example of big tech finding opportunities to cozy up to the president. Just this week OpenAI announced that it would be offering its ChatGPT Enterprise subscription to more than 2 million federal workers at practically zero cost. Choosing Perplexity as the engine for Truth Search AI also puts Trump Media in business with Jeff Bezos, one of Perplexity's largest backers . This week Apple CEO Tim Cook presented Trump with an engraved glass plaque set in a 24-karat gold base, to commemorate domestic investments by the company in an effort to avoid the president's ire at the company's foreign manufacturing of iPhones. With the addition of Truth Search AI, Truth Social gains an AI layer to its platform without the expense of building one, presumably in efforts to keep up with the likes of Grok on X . Perplexity, for its part, gains exposure to a new base of users to further train on.

Her friends were 'terrified' of dating apps, so this 30-year-old founder turned to AI to help singles find love
Her friends were 'terrified' of dating apps, so this 30-year-old founder turned to AI to help singles find love

CNBC

time25 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Her friends were 'terrified' of dating apps, so this 30-year-old founder turned to AI to help singles find love

For Nandini Mullaji, romantic setups have always been a way of life. The 30-year-old grew up in Mumbai, India where "matchmaking is a very, very strong part of the culture," she says. In fact, Mullaji's grandmother was a matchmaker and successfully set up two of her aunts. Mullaji attended boarding school in the U.S., then Georgetown University for undergrad and eventually Stanford for a combined MBA and master's in education. It was there that she was confronted with one of the major problems with modern dating: People were tired of swiping. Her friends were "successful, good looking, amazing women," she says, but "they were terrified of having to get back on the apps." In 2023, Mullaji, who was part of the team that launched Bumble in India years prior, went to work building her first dating app, Setup, which would set users up per their availability during the week. She quickly realized it didn't offer the kind of solution dating needed. "It didn't feel like this big, life changing product," she says. "It felt like a feature." The following year Mullaji met Chad DePue, who'd previously led teams at Snapchat and Microsoft. The two realized large language models like ChatGPT could be leveraged to create an AI matchmaker that leans into the tradition of Mullaji's homeland. Together they built Sitch, a pay-per-setup app that uses AI to identify the best romantic matches, which launched in December 2024. There has been a lot of interest in how AI might impact the future of dating — both from eager singles and investors. As of July 2025, Sitch has raised $6.7 million in pre-seed and seed funding and boasts "tens of thousands of users," Mullaji says. Here's what Sitch has that the other apps don't, and why Mullaji believes AI matchmaking is the solution modern dating needs. Mullaji identified several problems with the current dating apps. To start, users have too many options, she says. Next, messages in and sometimes out of the app rarely lead to actual dates, according to Mullaji. A 2022 study by Stanford researchers surveyed more than 1,000 Tinder users and half said they were not actually interested in meeting offline, citing reasons like boredom for why they're even on the app. Most importantly, Mullaji says, the information you get about a person via dating apps is limited and superficial, which leads to a "fundamental mismatch of values that would only reveal itself after a few dates." Daters are fatigued by conversations that go nowhere and dates that feel like a waste of time and money. Mullaji and DePue's solution is to have its AI do the heavy lifting upfront, which distinguishes Sitch from apps like Bumble, which uses AI primarily to enhance user safety and Hinge, whose AI features include a coach that gives feedback on your profile. On its website, Sitch promises daters a "personal matchmaker that's actually affordable, and will introduce you to someone you will actually vibe with." Singles can download the app or request a phone call via a prompt on the app's website to speak with an AI chatbot that was trained on Mullaji's own experience as a matchmaker — it even has her voice. Users then answer questions posed by the "matchmaker." They include straightforward questions about your interests and ideal date, but also questions meant to go deeper and identify a person's priorities and values, like about who you've dated in the past, what you liked and didn't like about them and what your dating goals are. Once the app has at least five possible matches based on user preferences, it starts sending those their way. Users can then ask questions about the other person, and when the app suggests someone they're interested in who's interested back, the AI matchmaker makes an introduction in a group chat, just like a friend would. Sitch users pay for successful setups. The app offers packs of three, five or eight setups that are priced at $90, $125 or $160. According to its website, the app justifies the cost — which is higher than competitors like Tinder and Bumble — by explaining that paying users are "serious and committed to actually meeting people IRL." But Mullaji is aware that as with any tech, problems will arise. "It can go rogue with the conversation," she says of the possibilities. For example, the AI can give the wrong advice about a potential date or hallucinate the wrong details about people. "But I think these are things that we're going to be able to fix as time goes on," she adds. One plus about an AI matchmaker versus a human one, Mullaji says, is that people aren't afraid to hurt its feelings and are not filtering what they say. "They're being so incredibly truthful," she says. That honesty, Sitch asserts, helps the AI matchmaker filter for exactly what the individual dater is looking for in a relationship and in a partner. Essentially, users waste less time and money on dates with people who just don't fit the bill. They also have a better shot at finding a long-term match. There is one part of Sitch's process that is still human-driven, though. The app manually reviews new user applications, which includes a verification selfie. Sitch is live in New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles and users of the app have already been on thousands of dates. Many of them report that working with an AI matchmaker has been a more positive experience compared to using a traditional dating app. James Harter, 31, used Sitch for a few months and found it effective in identifying people he'd actually enjoy spending time with. "I think every date I went on, there was a second date," he says. Harter recently met someone in-person and is not currently using the app. Karishma Thawani, 35, has been out with two different people she met on Sitch, one for two dates and the other for five dates. She intends to keep using it, because unlike the endless swiping on other dating apps, Sitch "feels more curated," she says. "I feel special when I get an introduction every week," Thawani says. "I wait for it." That kind of help and approach is "really our vision," Mullaji says. "[To] give every single person someone who can help guide them on the journey of learning about who they are, what they're looking for, finding that person, falling in love and staying in love." The company is planning to launch in Chicago and Austin by the end of 2025. "We hope that Sitch is global by 2030," Mullaji says. "That we have democratized access to having a matchmaker to help you make life's most important decision."

A mom has gone viral for using ChatGPT to co-parent her kid: ‘I feel like I'm cheating'
A mom has gone viral for using ChatGPT to co-parent her kid: ‘I feel like I'm cheating'

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

A mom has gone viral for using ChatGPT to co-parent her kid: ‘I feel like I'm cheating'

It takes a village — and ChatGPT — to raise a child nowadays. A Swiss mom has gone viral on TikTok for using ChatGPT as a third co-parent in raising her 3-year-old daughter. Currently living in Zurich, Switzerland, 33-year-old Lilian Schmidt says she uses AI for everything from creative meal planning and writing grocery lists to handling toddler tantrums, as well as her own emotions. 'I feel like I'm cheating at mom life,' she wrote in one TikTok, claiming ChatGPT did all the heavy lifting that day so that she could enjoy an iced coffee and a lake trip with her daughter. Schmidt also appeared on Good Morning America on Monday and said she struggled with sleep training her daughter, initially seeking advice from friends and her pediatrician. However, after trying ChatGPT on a friend's recommendation, she found it helpful and saw improvement. 'It gives me the mental space for what I should focus on because, at the end of the day, when I'm old and my kids are adults, they will remember me for actually being there with them in the moment, enjoying them, sharing special moments with them,' Schmidt told the outlet. The turn to AI comes as 60 percent of US adults say they feel burnt out by their current jobs. Schmidt, a corporate brand strategist, says she has a partner who 'does his fair share,' in raising their daughter as well as his 14-year-old son, but finds AI especially helpful in her duties. 'Our brains work differently. He's a doer and takes on the planning,' Schmidt told SWNS. 'I do the thinking. That mental load falls on me.' Schmidt recommends asking AI to take on an expert role, like a nutritionist, for creating kid-friendly meal plans, but cautions users to avoid sharing sensitive information about their family. Parenting expert Ericka Sóuter emphasized that AI provides a helpful 'head start on brainstorming.' Sóuter, the author of How to Have a Kid and a Life: A Survival Guide, told GMA co-anchor George Stephanopoulos that ChatGPT can be a helpful aid to parents by generating lunchbox and dinner ideas based on the ingredients already in their pantry, eliminating the mental load of meal planning. AI can also help design birthday invitations, create personalized bedtime stories that include a child's favorite toy or name, and even provide scripts for age-appropriate conversations, such as explaining the death of a pet, Sóuter said. It could also be a great resource for school project ideas, giving parents and children a creative boost when tackling science fairs or social studies assignments. However, Sóuter warned parents that AI shouldn't be a replacement for their intuition and that they should always fact-check the provided information. 'You want to avoid over-reliance on it,' she told Stephanopoulos. 'We see a lot of people using it and then they lose confidence in their own choices, and we don't want to do that.' 'Lastly, you have to be careful for privacy,' Sóuter continued. 'You don't want to put in too much about your family or your kids because we don't know where that information will end up. This is still a new technology with emerging guard rails.' Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store