How to Use AI to Help Your Kids With Homework
AI can explain anything at any grade level without making your kid feel dumb. Here is how to use it the right way so your child actually learns instead of just copying answers.
The Homework Problem Every Parent Knows
Your kid is stuck on a math problem and you have not touched that kind of math in 20 years. Or they have a book report due tomorrow and they are staring at a blank page. Or they keep asking you to explain the same concept over and over and you are running out of ways to say it differently.
Every parent has been there. And most of us feel a mix of guilt and frustration when we cannot help – either because we do not remember the material, or because we do not have the time to sit down and work through it with them.
AI tools have become genuinely good homework helpers. Not because they do the work for your kids, but because they can explain anything at the right level, patiently and as many times as needed, without sighing or checking their phone.
The right way to use AI for homework is as a tutor, not a shortcut. The goal is to help your child understand the concept – not to get the answer so they can move on. Used correctly, AI is one of the best learning tools available.
How to Use ChatGPT as a Homework Tutor
ChatGPT (free at chat.openai.com) is the most versatile option for homework help because you can describe any subject, any grade level, and any specific confusion and it will adjust its explanation accordingly.
The key: ask it to explain, not to answer
Instead of typing “what is the answer to this math problem,” have your child type “I do not understand how to do this math problem. Can you explain the steps to me like I am in 6th grade?” That framing gets an explanation rather than just an answer to copy down.
Prompts that work well for kids
- “Explain [topic] to me like I am [age/grade]. Use simple words.”
- “I got this wrong on my test. Can you help me understand why the right answer is [X]?”
- “Give me 3 practice problems for [topic] and then check my answers.”
- “Can you explain this paragraph from my textbook? I do not understand what it means.”
- “Help me brainstorm ideas for a story about [topic]. Do not write it for me, just give me ideas to choose from.”
That last one is important. Teaching your kids to ask for ideas rather than finished work is the difference between using AI as a learning tool and using it as a way to avoid learning.
Sit with your child the first few times they use AI for homework. Show them how to ask questions, how to follow up when an explanation is not clear, and how to use it as a starting point rather than a finished answer. That habit will serve them for years.
Khan Academy Khanmigo – Built for Learning
Khan Academy has an AI tutor called Khanmigo that is specifically designed for students. Unlike general AI tools, Khanmigo is built around one rule: it will never just give your child the answer. It only asks guiding questions to help them figure it out themselves.
This is the right approach for actual learning. The AI asks things like “What do you know about this topic so far?” and “What do you think the first step would be?” rather than solving the problem for the student.
Khanmigo is available through Khan Academy’s paid plan ($4/month for families), but Khan Academy itself – including thousands of free lessons and practice problems – is completely free. If your child is struggling with math especially, the free Khan Academy content alone is worth bookmarking.
What Subjects AI Helps With Most
AI is not equally useful for every subject. Here is where it genuinely helps and where it has limits.
Great for:
- Math concepts: Explaining why a method works, not just how to do the steps. Very good at adjusting explanation level to the grade.
- Writing: Brainstorming, outlining, giving feedback on drafts. Should be used as a coach, not a ghostwriter.
- Science: Explaining concepts in plain language, answering “why” questions that textbooks often skip over.
- History and social studies: Summarizing events, explaining context, answering background questions.
- Foreign language: Checking grammar, explaining rules, practicing conversation.
Be careful with:
- Specific facts that need to be exact: AI can make confident mistakes. Always double-check dates, names, and specific data.
- Essays that need to sound like a 10-year-old wrote them: Teachers can often tell when a student submits AI-written work. Help your child use it for ideas and structure, then write in their own words.
Many schools have policies about AI use in homework. Before letting your child use AI tools for schoolwork, it is worth checking with their teacher about what is and is not allowed. Using AI to understand something is generally fine. Submitting AI-written work as their own usually is not.
A Simple Ground Rule to Set With Your Kids
The most useful rule you can establish is this: AI can help you understand, but you have to be able to explain it back in your own words.
If your child reads an AI explanation and can tell you what it means – in their own words, without looking at the screen – they understood it. If they cannot, they need to ask another question.
That one rule keeps AI as a learning tool instead of a shortcut. And it also gives you a quick way to check whether they actually learned something or just moved on to the next problem without understanding the first one.
The goal is not to get through the homework. It is to understand the material. AI makes that easier – when it is used the right way.
