Ei Study

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Learning
Pulse

Edition 17 | May 2026

Edu- Praxis

Ai should support thinking, not replace it.

When AI Helps Performance but Weakens Learning

The Study

As AI tools become common in student homework, one important question is beginning to matter for every teacher:

Is AI helping students learn, or only helping them complete the task?
A recent study by Hamsa Bastani, Osbert Bastani, Alp Sungu, Haosen Ge, Özge Kabakcı and Rei Mariman examined this question in high school mathematics. The researchers conducted a field experiment with nearly 1,000 high school students and studied how GPT-4 based tools affected studentsʼ learning during maths practice.

Students were placed in three broad conditions:

  • One group used a standard GPT-4 based chat interface, similar to a normal ChatGPT experience.
  • A second group used a GPT-4 based tutor designed with safeguards, which gave guidance and hints rather than simply providing answers.
  • A control group used traditional learning resources such as textbooks and notes.

  • The key question was not only whether students performed better while using AI. The researchers also examined what happened when AI was taken away and students had to solve problems independently


The Main Findings

The findings are important for schools because they show a sharp difference between assisted performance and actual learning.

  • Students using the standard GPT-4 tool performed much better during practice. Their practice performance improved by 48% compared with the control group.
  • Students using the guided GPT Tutor performed even better during practice, showing a 127% improvement compared with the control group.
  • However, when AI assistance was removed, students who had used the standard GPT-4 tool performed 17% worse than students who had never used AI assistance.
  • The negative effect was largely avoided when students used the guided GPT Tutor, which was designed to protect learning by giving hints and support rather than direct answers.

In short:

AI improved performance during practice, but unguided AI use weakened later independent performance.

This does not mean AI is bad for learning. It means that how AI is used matters. An AI tool that gives quick answers can become a shortcut. An AI tool that asks questions, gives hints and pushes students to explain their reasoning can become a scaffold.

Related Research

This finding connects strongly with what teachers already know from classroom experience: students can appear confident while practising, but struggle when asked to do the same task independently later.

In learning science, this is sometimes may show up as the visible difference between fluency and mastery. A student may feel fluent because the answer is available, the steps are visible or the tool is guiding the process. But mastery requires the student to retrieve, reason, decide, check and correct their own thinking.

AI can easily create a false sense of understanding. A student may submit a polished answer without having gone through the productive struggle needed to build the skill. This is especially risky in subjects such as mathematics, science and writing, where the process matters as much as the final answer

The study is useful because it does not simply say that technology is distracting. It shows a more precise problem:

When AI removes too much thinking from the learner, it may also remove part of the learning.

Classroom Implications

For teachers, the implication is not to ban AI blindly. The better response is to design guardrails. In practice, this means teachers should distinguish between these kinds of AI use:

The key principle is simple:

AI should not replace the studentʼs thinking. It should improve the quality of the studentʼs thinking.

Teachers can therefore ask students to show evidence of their own reasoning before using AI. For example:

  • What did you try first?
  • Where did you get stuck
  • What hint did you ask for?
  • What did the AI suggest?
  • What did you accept, reject or change?
  • Can you now solve a similar question without AI?
This turns AI from a silent shortcut into a visible learning process.

Try This in Your Class

Final Reflection

The real question is not whether students should use AI. They already are, and they will continue to.

The better question is:

Does AI help the student think more deeply, or does it help the student avoid thinking?

For teachers, this study offers a clear professional direction. AI should be introduced not as an answer machine, but as a guided thinking partner. The difference is not technological. It is pedagogical.

Reference List

Bastani, H., Bastani, O., Sungu, A., Ge, H., Kabakcı, Ö., and Mariman, R. (2025). Generative AI without guardrails can harm learning: Evidence from high school mathematics. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 122(26), e2422633122.

Recommended article:
Without Guardrails, Generative AI Can Harm Education

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