AI can undermine learning when students use it without guidance
Claim
Unguided AI use can undermine learning when it replaces productive struggle, while guided use can support stronger thinking.
Stance
Supported by the source articles as an AI-in-education claim.
Evidence
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Against Brain Damage supports this claim through its discussion of AI use, evaluation, implementation, learning, or literacy in context.
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Against Brain Damage supports this claim through its discussion of very relevant for AI pedagogy, tutoring design, writing instruction, academic integrity, prompt design, and teacher guidance because it distinguishes productive AI scaffolding from cognitive outsourcing.
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The Hidden Curriculum of AI Interactive Spaces supports this claim through its discussion of very high relevance for K-12 AI procurement, AI tutoring, student data/privacy debates, developmental AI literacy, classroom routines, and school district implementation decisions.
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AI Study Modes supports this claim through its discussion of relevant for AI tutoring, student study support, homework design, academic integrity, and teacher guidance around when AI should answer directly versus scaffold student thinking.
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Brookings’ AI in K-12 Report: Benefits Remain Theoretical, Harms Are Already Here supports this claim through its discussion of very high relevance for K-12 AI implementation, student learning risks, teacher adoption, institutional reform, and the mismatch between adult productivity narratives and student development.
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Offloading vs Outsourcing in the AI Classroom supports this claim through its discussion of very high relevance for AI policy, writing instruction, assignment design, academic integrity, student metacognition, and higher education pedagogy.
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What Happened When We Taught AI Literacy Like Writing supports this claim through its discussion of AI literacy, assessment, implementation, or learning design in context.
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The AI Revolution Looks Like Homework supports this claim through its discussion of AI literacy, assessment, implementation, or learning design in context.
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How Teens Use and View AI supports this claim through its discussion of AI literacy, assessment, implementation, or learning design in context.
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My Kids Do Long Division by Hand supports this claim through its discussion of AI literacy, assessment, implementation, or learning design in context.
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Teachers’ AI Literacy and Agency in AI Integration: A Qualitative Study of Teachers in Delhi Private Schools supports this claim through its discussion of AI literacy, assessment, implementation, or learning design in context.
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A New Direction for Students in an AI World: Prosper, Prepare, Protect supports this claim through its discussion of AI literacy, assessment, implementation, or learning design in context.
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Thinking with AI: The Teacher Workshop supports this claim through its discussion of AI literacy, assessment, implementation, or learning design in context.
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What 81,000 People Told Anthropic supports this claim through its discussion of AI literacy, assessment, implementation, or learning design in context.
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Are You Guilty of “Cognitive Surrender”? supports this claim by framing uncritical AI reliance as a gradual habit that can replace source-checking, self-explanation, and independent judgment.
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What Students Want Teachers to Know supports this claim through its discussion of AI literacy, assessment, implementation, or learning design in context.
Practical implication
Teachers should design AI-supported learning routines that require students to think first, receive guidance, and use AI for critique, feedback, or extension rather than answer replacement.