Google’s Gemini AI wants to be your new study buddy
Instead of spitting out a direct answer, Guided Learning walks you through problems step by step.

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Google is giving its Gemini AI a major upgrade, one designed to help students learn, not just copy answers.
The new feature, called Guided Learning, turns Gemini into more of a study companion than a cheat sheet.
Instead of spitting out a direct answer, Guided Learning walks you through problems step by step.
It asks questions, offers hints, and provides support as you go, a bit like having a tutor who encourages critical thinking.
Responses can include images, videos, and even interactive quizzes, making it more engaging and easier to understand complex ideas.
Sundar Pichai says the tool was developed with the help of educators, researchers, and students to make sure it’s rooted in solid learning science.
The goal is to help students actually grasp concepts, not just breeze through homework.
This move comes as AI companies like Google and OpenAI face criticism for enabling cheating.
Many teachers have worried that students are using AI chatbots to skip the learning process altogether.
With Guided Learning and similar features, like OpenAI’s recently launched study mode for ChatGPT, tech companies are trying to show they can support real education, not replace it.
Google is also sweetening the deal for students.
If you’re 18 or older and live in the US, Japan, Indonesia, Korea, or Brazil, you can now get a free 12-month subscription to Gemini’s AI Pro Plan if you sign up before October 6th.
In addition, Google has pledged $1 billion over the next three years to support education, especially around AI literacy.
This includes funding for research, educational programs, and cloud computing tools for schools.
So, while AI tools have often been seen as shortcuts, Google is hoping to shift the narrative.
With Guided Learning, Gemini might just become a useful tool for learning smarter, not lazier. Whether students embrace it for that purpose, though, is still the big question.
Will Google’s Guided Learning feature actually help students learn better, or are we just putting a educational wrapper on the same cheating tools? Do you think AI tutoring can replace human teachers for certain subjects, or is there something irreplaceable about human instruction? Tell us below in the comments, or reach us via our Twitter or Facebook.
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