ChatGPT launches new cheat/learning mode for students
- snitzoid
- Oct 13
- 3 min read
Attention students. Show your steps along the way to cheat your way to the eventual answer. Only you and Allah will know you're a fraud.
Is this me? Or some cleverly disguised chat bot with a bad attitude?
Introducing study mode
Chat GPT
Oct 13, 2025
A new way to learn in ChatGPT that offers step by step guidance instead of quick answers.
Try in ChatGPT(opens in a new window)
Today we’re introducing study mode in ChatGPT—a learning experience that helps you work through problems step by step instead of just getting an answer. Starting today, it’s available to logged in users on Free, Plus, Pro, Team, with availability in ChatGPT Edu coming in the next few weeks.
ChatGPT is becoming one of the most widely used learning tools in the world. Students turn to it to work through challenging homework problems, prepare for exams, and explore new concepts. But its use in education has also raised an important question: how do we ensure it is used to support real learning, and doesn’t just offer solutions without helping students make sense of them?
We’ve built study mode to help answer this question. When students engage with study mode, they’re met with guiding questions that calibrate responses to their objective and skill level to help them build deeper understanding. Study mode is designed to be engaging and interactive, and to help students learn something—not just finish something.
How study mode was built
Under the hood, study mode is powered by custom system instructions we’ve written in collaboration with teachers, scientists, and pedagogy experts to reflect a core set of behaviors that support deeper learning including: encouraging active participation, managing cognitive load, proactively developing metacognition and self reflection, fostering curiosity, and providing actionable and supportive feedback. These behaviors are based on longstanding research in learning science and shape how study mode responds to students.
“Instead of doing the work for them, study mode encourages students to think critically about their learning. Features like these are a positive step toward effective AI use for learning. Even in the AI era, the best learning still happens when students are excited about and actively engaging with the lesson material.” —Robbie Torney, Senior Director of AI Programs at Common Sense Media.
Key features
Interactive prompts: Combines Socratic questioning, hints, and self-reflection prompts to guide understanding and promote active learning, instead of providing answers outright.
Scaffolded responses: Information is organized into easy-to-follow sections that highlight the key connections between topics, keeping information engaging with just the right amount of context and reducing overwhelm for complex topics.
Personalized support: Lessons are tailored to the right level for the user, based on questions that assess skill level and memory from previous chats.
Knowledge checks: Quizzes and open-ended questions, along with personalized feedback to track progress, support knowledge retention and the ability to apply that knowledge in new contexts.
Flexibility: Easily toggle study mode on and off during a conversation, giving you the flexibility to adapt to your learning goals in each conversation.
How students use study mode
Study mode was built with college students in mind. Some feedback we heard from students during early testing:
“The best way I’d describe it is a live, 24/7, all-knowing “office hours.” —Noah Campbell, college student
“Study mode did a great job breaking down dense material into clear, well-paced explanations.” —Caleb Masi, college student
“I put study mode to the test to tutor me on a concept I have attempted to learn many times before: sinusoidal positional encodings. It was like a tutor who doesn’t get tired of my questions. After a 3-hour working session, I finally understood it well enough to feel confident.” —Maggie Wang, college student
Ways to use study mode inspired by college students from the ChatGPT lab
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