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Simon Nicholas's avatar

It's certainly a mistake to classify AI tutors as equivalent to human tutors. It's self-evident (or should be) that the key element of a person-to-person tutoring experience is the relationship between the tutor and the student -- hence why not a single tutor I know is concerned about losing their job to an AI chatbot, nor should they be.

But I don't fully agree with your post. For one thing, the trope that the fancy new technology inhibits critical child-focused learning practices could easily by applied to video tutoring. You're tutoring a 5th grader over video chat, and you're showing this student how to convert mixed numbers into improper fractions. Couldn't you very easily make a case that it would be much better to tutor this kid in person? That holding up a piece of loose leaf to a camera is not that same as having your tutor watch over your shoulder as you work step-by-step? That getting full human context and building a relationship is harder over Zoom? That your student could have a phone with them, could get distracted, could work in a reclined position on their couch instead of in active learning position at their desk? But OF COURSE we've come to accept that there are many benefits to video tutoring: the ability to easily embed media, quick dissemination of materials, and -- here's the big one -- flexibility to meet kids all over the world.

Now: can an AI tutor build a relationship? No. (Not all human tutors do either.) But can they be pushy? Can they ask for context? Can they use multimedia? Depends on the tutoring program you're using -- much like it depends on the human tutor you're working with. FWIW, I know a shocking number of virtual tutors who don't even own an Apple pencil, or understand Desmos, or who constantly multitask while working. Will a human tutor be available to you at 11pm after school + soccer game + finishing homework + procrastinating because you're 15 years old? Probably not. And -- of course -- will a human tutor work with you for free? Or $20 a month? Do you even want a human tutor who is charging $20 a month?

Excellent human tutoring is irreplaceable. It's also expensive, hard to scale, and hard to come by. AI tutoring is a fundamentally different beast, and one that is in its infancy. The real question should not be, can AI tutoring replace human tutoring? Rather, can AI tutoring help kids? Even right now, with GPT 4.0 less than 1 year old, the answer to that question is yes. Skepticism is vital, and each platform should be considered on an individual basis. But I would not compare infant-stage AI tutoring to the platonic ideal of human tutoring.

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Susan Socha's avatar

I am currently tutoring Alg 2. One thing that I do that AI can’t do is to know when to stop a student who is doing work algorithmically and move them to something else. Then, when they have been distracted enough, return to what they were doing originally. My theory is that you have to forget something and then revisit it before you really get it into long term memory This seems to work.

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