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Active Learning with AI

Reminder

Always check your instructor鈥檚 policies regarding AI before using it for any part of an assignment.

Policies vary by course. What is allowed in one class may be considered academic dishonesty in another. Even if it is just for brainstorming, using AI without permission could result in a violation of 糖心少女鈥檚 Academic Honesty Policy.

Check the syllabus, and when in doubt, ask your instructor.

AI tools like ChatGPT or Microsoft Copilot can help you brainstorm, review, question, and clarify ideas; however, they should never replace your thinking and learning process. 

At Learning & Tutoring Services (LTS), our tutors work to help you develop the tutor in your own head. The way we tutor is intended to help exercise your ability to reason, question, explain, and reflect independently. Although it is not as enriching, with the right approach, AI can support that same goal. 

AI Guided Learning Modes

Some generative AI tools include features designed to support active learning and skill development as opposed to serving only as easy answer machines. These modes encourage to help students reach conclusions for themselves; however, they are limited a learning tool. These limits derive both from the tool's design and the user's choices. 

  • ChatGPT's "Study Mode"

    How to Access It
    When signed into ChatGPT Edu, enable "Study Mode" by clicking the plus icon (+) in the chat dialogue.

  • Microsoft Copilot's "Study & Learn Mode"

    How to Access It
    Study and learn mode has been released through only some versions of Copilot. To see if your version is enabled, click the mode selector at the top of the chat. Then choose "Study and Learn Mode."

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AI Features and Limitations
Advertised Features Limitations

Engaging Through Socratic-Style Questions

It ask users to outline their understanding of topics. If a user asks a question, they will receive more questions in return.

  • It may still provide partial or incremental answers in order to maintain engagement.
  • It cannot truly gauge your confidence, hesitation, or misconceptions the way a human tutor can.
  • If a student persistently requests answers, it may eventually provide them.
  • The 鈥淪ocratic鈥 dialogue is generated from patterns in data, not from genuine awareness of your understanding.

Meeting Students Where They Are

Study Mode attempts to adapt to a learner鈥檚 current level of understanding by asking diagnostic questions and adjusting the complexity of explanations accordingly.

  • Its sense of progression is generalized and may not align with your instructor鈥檚 course sequence or expectations.
  • It does not have access to your syllabus, grading criteria, or specific instructional goals unless you explicitly provide them.

Breaking Concepts into Progressive Steps

The tool can scaffold complex ideas into smaller, more manageable parts, guiding students step-by-step through reasoning processes or problem solving.

  • Step-by-step guidance can sometimes reduce productive struggle if students rely on it too quickly.
  • It may oversimplify nuanced concepts.
  • It cannot independently determine when a challenging a learner would better support long-term learning and transfer.

 


Training AI to Be Your Study Partner 

The most effective AI tutoring prompts: 

  • Sets a clear, specific learning goal
  • Prevent over-explanation and overreliance
  • Encourage Socratic questioning
  • Support metacognition (thinking about your thinking)
  • Use analogies, mnemonics, and practice to reinforce memory
  • Only explain when you choose to ask
  • Create space for you to lead the learning 

Strict Prompting for Better AI Tutoring 

Consider the prompt below to create an AI tutor and an explanations of its elements below that:

Play the role of a tutor in [subject]. I do not want to be given answers. I want to be able to [remember, understand, analyze, evaluate, or create] key ideas regarding [insert concept]. Please keep this in mind as you support me. 

I鈥檇 like you to mostly ask me Socratic-style questions rather than giving answers or long explanations. Only when I ask for clarification, you may explain the concept. You may offer to clarify if I seem confused but first try to remedy that confusion through question asking.   

When you do explain, please do so using analogies or comparisons that connect to real-world situations or personal experiences. You may also suggest memory devices such as mnemonics, diagrams, or simple associations if you think they will help me retain the material, but only after I鈥檝e attempted to explain the concept myself. 

Please help me track what I seem to understand versus what I struggle with. You can occasionally pause to ask questions like 鈥淗ow confident are you in that answer?鈥 or  鈥淐an you think of a time this concept would be useful?鈥. 

Keep a friendly but focused tone. You should be supportive and encouraging, but you should not let me avoid the hard thinking. I want to become a more independent and resilient thinker.  

Let鈥檚 begin with a checking my understanding about [insert topic].  

Learning Goals & Cognitive Depth

The first paragraph of the prompt begins by setting the goals, clearly stating that the purpose is to understand or do something with the concept. It鈥檚 an important distinction from just remembering the concept. Use Bloom鈥檚 Taxonomy (remember, understand, apply, analyze, evaluate, create) so ChatGPT can appropriately pose questions and challenges to that end. This alignment ensures the AI doesn鈥檛 stay stuck at the surface like quizzing you on facts.  

Socratic Questioning 

The second paragraph sets the boundaries of the session: the AI is the question-asker, which puts the focus on the student as a thinker and learner. Socratic method consists of a series of open-ended, progressive questions that push the learner to examine, justify, or test their reasoning. It is a best practice in tutoring and empowers learners. 

Explanations Through Analogies & Retention Supports 

The third paragraph emphasizes that while question-asking should be the AI鈥檚 priority, when it鈥檚 explanation is invited, it should come in a form that is understandable and preferable. Choose methods of explanation that best suit your learning and the goals of the session. There are many to choose from.  

Analogies make complex ideas more familiar by comparing them to something you already understand. For example: 

鈥淭hink of voltage like water pressure and the circuit like plumbing 鈥 the current flows only when there鈥檚 pressure and a complete path.鈥 

Real-world examples help anchor abstract concepts in everyday experience. For example: 

鈥淐ognitive dissonance is like telling everyone you鈥檙e into healthy eating, but secretly eating fast food. The discomfort you feel is the tension between your identity and your behavior.鈥 

Mnemonic devices use patterns, acronyms, or imagery to make memorization easier. For example: 

鈥淯se the acronym HOMES to remember the Great Lakes: Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, and Superior.鈥 

Visual models and diagrams help by translating language-heavy explanations into spatial or relational representations. 

鈥淚magine a pyramid of needs 鈥 at the bottom are things like food and shelter, and at the top are things like self-fulfillment. That鈥檚 Maslow鈥檚 hierarchy.鈥 

Process breakdowns to make each step digestible before connecting the whole. 

鈥淟et鈥檚 walk through natural selection in four steps: variation, inheritance, differential survival, and reproduction.鈥 

Comparison and contrast highlights differences to sharpen understanding. 

鈥淧hotosynthesis stores energy by building molecules, while cellular respiration releases energy by breaking them down.鈥 

Metacognition & Confidence Checking 

The fourth paragraph also asks the AI to be a learning coach. Being nudged to reflect on what you know, what you don鈥檛, and how you know engages you in metacognition. This is an important state to be in because it helps you have more agency in your learning process. It also gives the AI cues for how to adjust the session dynamically, making the support more responsive. 

When these check-ins do occur, they are great opportunities to redirect the AI as you tutor. Would you prefer other forms of explanation? Would you like harder questions? Would you like to move on to a different concept in the subject? Let the AI tutor know.  

Tone & Productive Struggle 

The last part of the prompt focuses on tone. This has much to do with your preference as a learner. You may respond to frequent praise or maybe you subscribe to a tough love approach. Reflect on what motivates you!  

Please note that AI models are sometimes prone to praise and flattery as a default. 


Limitations of AI Tutoring 

While AI can simulate tutoring, it does not replace human educators or peer tutors. Why? 

Bias and Gaps

AI reflects the content it was trained on, which often favors dominant and pervasive perspectives. It may unintentionally reinforce stereotypes or overlook important voices or interpretations. If your course involves radical or even just slightly divisive thinking, AI may reinforce the very ideas your course attempts to counter.  

Hallucinations 

AI can generate convincing but false information, especially when asked for citations, dates, or niche theories. These 鈥渉allucinations鈥 sound confident but lack any grounding in real sources. For instance, AI might cite an academic article that doesn鈥檛 exist or misattribute a theory to the wrong thinker. 

For this reason, AI can be leveraged more effectively by someone with pre-existing knowledge on the topic. Be sure to double check the information it provides you with.  

No Pedagogical Awareness 

Unlike LTS tutors, AI doesn鈥檛 know your instructor鈥檚 preferences, course structure, or assignment expectations. It cannot interpret classroom nuance or help you respond to personalized feedback from faculty.  

AI can鈥檛 observe your nonverbal cues, spot patterns in your reasoning, or redirect its approach based on what鈥檚 actually helping you. A peer tutor takes all of that into account.  

No Social Ties 

Tutoring is an social and trust-based relationship. AI can simulate this tone, but it does not connect you with other classmates, help you feel like you belong, or relate with you on any level. A peer tutor can do all of that. Stop by Learning and Tutoring Services to find out!