Google announced a brand-new AI feature for Google Gemini on Wednesday called Guided Learning, and it is not your average chatbot update. Think of it as the AI version of that super patient tutor you wish you had, one that helps you understand a topic, not just throw answers at you.
Guided Learning is built right into Gemini and walks users through problems step by step, adjusting how it explains things based on what you need. It is a full-on interactive experience, with diagrams, quizzes, videos, and more. You are not just being told the answer; you are learning why it is the answer and how to think through it next time.
This update drops just over a week after OpenAI introduced Study Mode for ChatGPT, which also leans into the “let’s teach, not just tell” approach. Both launches are responding to growing concerns that AI chatbots could stunt learning by making it too easy to cheat the system. These companies now want you to see their bots as actual study tools, not shortcuts.
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“Whether you’re prepping for an exam on enzymes, writing a paper about bees, or geeking out over photography, Guided Learning is like a thinking partner that helps you get it — every step of the way,” said Maureen Heymans, VP of Learning & Sustainability at Google.
And that is not all. Gemini is also getting some extra upgrades to support learners:
- It now automatically pulls in visuals, YouTube videos, and diagrams when explaining concepts.
- You can ask it to create flashcards and study guides based on your class materials or quiz results.
- Oh, and if you are a student in the U.S., Japan, Indonesia, Korea, or Brazil, Google’s throwing in a free year of its AI Pro plan, which includes premium access to Gemini 2.5 Pro, NotebookLM, Deep Research, Veo 3, and more.
Google wants Gemini to go from being just a smart assistant to a smart study assistant. And if you are wondering whether this is a reaction to ChatGPT’s education features, it is. But hey, if AI tools are now competing to help us learn, we’re not mad at it. Is this the future of studying, where your AI knows your learning style better than your teacher? Or will students just find new ways to skip the work?