Content area

Abstract

Authoring of help content within educational technologies is labor intensive, requiring many iterations of content creation, refining, and proofreading. In this paper, we conduct an efficacy evaluation of ChatGPT-generated help using a 3 x 4 study design (N = 274) to compare the learning gains of ChatGPT to human tutor-authored help across four mathematics problem subject areas. Participants are randomly assigned to one of three hint conditions (control, human tutor, or ChatGPT) paired with one of four randomly assigned subject areas (Elementary Algebra, Intermediate Algebra, College Algebra, or Statistics). We find that only the ChatGPT condition produces statistically significant learning gains compared to a no-help control, with no statistically significant differences in gains or time-on-task observed between learners receiving ChatGPT vs human tutor help. Notably, ChatGPT-generated help failed quality checks on 32% of problems. This was, however, reducible to nearly 0% for algebra problems and 13% for statistics problems after applying self-consistency, a “hallucination” mitigation technique for Large Language Models.

Details

1009240
Company / organization
Title
ChatGPT-generated help produces learning gains equivalent to human tutor-authored help on mathematics skills
Publication title
PLoS One; San Francisco
Volume
19
Issue
5
First page
e0304013
Publication year
2024
Publication date
May 2024
Section
Research Article
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Place of publication
San Francisco
Country of publication
United States
e-ISSN
19326203
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
Document type
Journal Article
Publication history
 
 
Milestone dates
2023-08-15 (Received); 2024-05-03 (Accepted); 2024-05-24 (Published)
ProQuest document ID
3069289817
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/chatgpt-generated-help-produces-learning-gains/docview/3069289817/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
© 2024 Pardos, Bhandari. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.
Last updated
2025-07-21
Database
ProQuest One Academic