Thursday, March 26, 2026

Significant grade inflation may be occurring in graduate education

 




Graduate grade inflation at a U.S. research-intensive university: A 22-year longitudinal analysis 

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Predicted GPA by year and by degree level. Predicted values are conditional on model covariates and reflect the reference groups used in the analyses (female and White students), with GRE held at its mean (GRE = 0) and the missing GRE indicator set to 0.

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Credit: Lee et al., 2026, PLOS One, CC-BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

Analysis of two decades of student data at a large U.S. university suggests that grade inflation exists in graduate education. Vivien Lee and colleagues at the University of Minnesota, U.S., present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS One on March 25, 2026.

Grade inflation is a phenomenon in which grades for academic courses increase for reasons other than improved student ability or work quality, resulting in higher GPAs and higher proportions of top grades. Numerous factors may contribute to grade inflation, such as pressure on instructors to keep students happy or grading policies to attract students to certain fields. Grade inflation has been detected and studied in many high school and undergraduate settings around the world. However, few studies have investigated grade inflation at the graduate level.

To address that gap, Lee and colleagues analyzed data on students admitted to graduate programs at a large U.S. Midwestern university from 1999 to 2022, covering 40,516 students across 75 different master’s and 78 doctoral programs. The researchers used students’ scores on the GRE—a standardized test for graduate admissions—to statistically account for any grade increases that could be explained by changes in admitted students’ abilities.

The analysis revealed grade inflation in both master’s and doctoral programs, even after accounting for students’ GRE scores, sex, and ethnicity. Importantly, the trend of grade inflation appeared to be non-linear and the magnitude of grade inflation was significantly different across academic programs. Grade inflation was stronger on average in master’s versus doctoral programs.

Grade inflation was especially pronounced among students admitted to graduate programs in nearly all fields between 2017 and 2020, possibly due to changes in grading and instruction that occurred during the Covid-19 pandemic. However, between 1999 and 2016, grades actually trended downwards in certain fields, bucking the overall trend. No overall difference in grade inflation trends was seen for STEM versus non-STEM programs, at either the master’s or doctoral level.

These findings could have implications for employment, admissions, and merit-based funding decisions that depend on graduate student grades. The authors note that this study is preliminary, and further research is needed to clarify the extent and drivers of graduate grade inflation.

The authors add: "We know a lot about grade inflation at the undergraduate level but know little about the graduate level. We obtained a large and rare database: information on over 40,000 graduate students across a 23-year time period. Our core finding is that grade inflation is present at the graduate level and thus is not a phenomenon limited to undergraduate education."

 


COVID-19 pandemic’s disrupted young children’s executive function development

 How did the COVID-19 pandemic impact young children’s executive function skills? 

Executive function skills are a set of inter-related processes that support attention, self-control, and goal-directed behavior. Executive function has been linked to positive outcomes across multiple domains of development. The skills associated with executive function develop rapidly during childhood and promote longer-term health, academic success, and wellbeing. Researchers from Harvard University were eager to learn how the pandemic affected children's developing executive function skills across time.

Using data gathered from 2018 to 2023 as part of the Early Learning Study at Harvard (ELS@H), a longitudinal, population-based and representative study of children’s development conducted in Massachusetts, the researchers analyzed a sample of over 3,100 children from age 3 to 11. Half of the sample were girls; the children were mostly white (74.6%), while 18.3% were Hispanic, 11.8% were Black, and 10.7% were Asian. Nearly half of all parents reported incomes between $75,000 - $125,000 or between $125,000 - $200,000 per year with around 20% reporting more than $200,000 and about 30% reporting less than $75,000.

Children were administered the Minnesota Executive Function Scale (MEFS), a tablet-based assessment used to measure executive function. Researchers used the data to track the development of executive function skills over six years, before, during, and after the pandemic’s onset. 

The researchers found the average rate at which executive function grew following the pandemic’s onset was lower than is developmentally typical based on previous national norms and existing research; this pattern held across all socioeconomic subgroups. The authors suggest that this finding may help explain the systemic academic and behavioral challenges facing children since the pandemic, and they emphasize that to mitigate the pandemic’s ongoing effects, these students may need more support to develop and expand their executive function skills. 

The study is featured in a new Child Development article, “The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Young Children’s Executive Function: A Longitudinal, Population-based Study,” by Stephanie M. Jones, Caitlin M. Dermody, Jen Acosta, and Nonie K. Lesaux of Harvard University and Alan F. Mozaffari of the University of California, Berkeley. The Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD) had the opportunity to speak with the author team to learn more about the research.

SRCD: Did anything in the results surprise you? 

Author team: Executive function is an essential cognitive capacity that develops rapidly during early childhood and is shaped by early experiences. Therefore, we were not surprised that an extreme disruption like the pandemic affected the development of children’s executive function skills. That being said, the magnitude of our findings was surprising. Children’s scores in our sample were significantly below the nationally normed average scores of age-matched children measured before the pandemic, even though the children met or even exceeded age-matched scores before the pandemic’s onset. The starkness of this finding sheds light on the systemic scope of the pandemic’s effects on child well-being and the importance of traditional education and care experiences for all children’s development. Specifically, we know that prior research has identified many of the significant and sustained challenges that children and families experienced following the pandemic’s onset (e.g., parental stress, economic instability, illness, social isolation, and other disruptions to education and care) as factors that can disrupt executive function. It may well be that these pandemic-related experiences, alone or in concert, place substantial burdens on families and the broader systems that sustain and support family and child wellbeing, resulting in the pattern of findings we observed for children’s executive function. 

SRCD: Can you explain how this research might help families, teachers, school administrators, policymakers and researchers?

Author team: Right now, those who care for, work with, or think about today’s youth continue to hear and share stories of children’s struggles post-pandemic. Uniting the growing body of research on executive function with the wealth of existing information on the pandemic’s impacts offers a path toward recovery. Specifically, we need more efforts to strengthen children’s executive function skills and more systemic strategies to improve the environments that support them. It is well documented that early disparities in executive function predict later challenges in health, academics, and behavior, so efforts to support children’s skills today are an essential step forward. For families and educators, our findings highlight the power of environmental influences and the importance of attending to executive function as a key facet of child development. For policymakers and administrators, our research suggests that supporting executive function may be a key recommendation for pandemic recovery efforts, investments, and resources. For researchers, our study calls for further investigation into the role of executive function as an explanatory mechanism driving challenges to children’s academic and behavioral struggles post-pandemicWe plan to continue to explore the mechanisms driving our findings in our upcoming work, and current research in our lab provides insights into the long-term challenges facing students (e.g., Fritz et al., 2026). Most importantly, our research joins others in recognizing that the systemic challenges of the pandemic require systemic solutions. 

SRCD: How did family/parental income intersect with the pandemic’s effects on the sample of developing children you examined?

Author team: Past research demonstrates that executive function is linked to socioeconomic status. Prior to the pandemic, the well-documented pattern of variation in executive function by income was present in our sample; however, once the pandemic began, income-based gaps appeared to narrow. The patterns in our findings held on average across all socioeconomic sub-groups, demonstrating the systemic scope of the pandemic’s effects on all children’s well-being and the importance of supportive experiences and environments for all children’s development. 

SRCD: What are some of the research’s limitations? 

Author team: As in many longitudinal studies, pandemic disruptions resulted in changes in the frequency and methodology of our data collection in the Early Learning Study at Harvard (ELS@H). Once the pandemic began, we were unable to directly assess the children until two years following our last pre-pandemic data collection. While this pacing could result in some missed nuances, it did allow us to examine our data in a unique time-stamped way pre- and post-pandemic. The pandemic also altered our method of data collection: the MEFS assessments were administered in person for the first three waves and virtually for the fourth and fifth waves. Although some studies have found that virtual assessments of executive function can be as reliable as in-person assessments (Ernst et al., 2024; Perry et al., 2023), it is possible this change affected our data. That being said, multiple pilots and robustness checks suggested no differences, making us confident that our data represent children’s executive function skills accurately. Other limitations include that our findings are specific to our population-based sample in Massachusetts and may not be applicable nationally. In the future, research comparing these findings to those of other longitudinal studies in different populations would be beneficial. Although we cannot make strong causal claims here about the impact of the pandemic and its related events on children’s executive function, the longitudinal nature of the design, the population sample, and the external nature of the pandemic “shock” lends strong credibility to the directionality and pattern of our findings.

SRCD: How should future research further investigate the role of executive function among children who continue to struggle academically and behaviorally in a post-pandemic society?

Author team: Theory and empirical evidence show how executive function skills are related to multiple domains of development. For example, these skills are positively associated with peer acceptance, adaptive classroom behavior, and social competence, and negatively associated with internalizing and externalizing problems, as well as inattention and hyperactivity, both concurrently and longitudinally (e.g., Stuke & Doebel, 2024). Therefore, to best support children, further research will need to continue to unpack those relationships between executive function and the post-pandemic challenges related to behavior, academics, or absenteeism. In so doing, such research will be able to provide continued insight into the mechanisms that drive executive function development across time as children face new and diverse environmental experiences. Researchers will thus be able to provide evidence on policy and pedagogical solutions that best serve students’ needs (e.g., support for executive function skills). Our upcoming work with the ELS@H data plans to do just that, embracing an ecological perspective as we study our population-based sample in a longitudinal way. Most importantly, we hope that researchers remain interested in learning more about the importance of executive function skills for children, as well as the impact of environmental experiences on their development. 

This research was funded by the Saul Zaentz Charitable Foundation.

Summarized from an article in Child Development, “The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Young Children’s Executive Function: A Longitudinal, Population-based Study,” by Jones, S.M., Dermody, C.M., Acosta, J. Lesaux, N.K. (Harvard University) and Mozaffari, A. F. (University of California, Berkeley). Copyright 2026 The Society for Research in Child Development. All rights reserved.

 

Boys ditch books when schools close – girls keep reading

 

The gap between boys’ and girls’ reading grows when schools are closed. This is shown in a new study published in the scientific journal PNAS, where researchers followed the reading habits of more than 200,000 Danish schoolchildren during holidays and COVID‑19 lockdowns.

Girls simply read more than boys – and the difference becomes significantly larger when school is not in session.

According to sociologist Ea Hoppe Blaabæk from the University of Copenhagen, who conducted the study together with three colleagues, the results indicate that boys in particular rely on the structure provided by school to maintain their reading.

“Our data very clearly show that boys lose more ground than girls when schools are closed. This applies both during ordinary holiday periods and during the unexpected COVID‑19 lockdowns,” she explains, adding:

“In other words, school plays an important role as a standardised framework that helps boys read. When that framework disappears, it is boys who fall the furthest behind.”

Reading inequality can have major consequences
Ea Hoppe Blaabæk and her colleagues warn that this widening inequality may have long‑term consequences if boys do not catch up after holidays and school closures.

“We know that reading is a key competence. There is a clear link between being a strong reader and the likelihood of continuing in the education system after compulsory schooling. That is why it is important that schools understand how periods without school may affect boys and girls differently,” says Blaabæk.

BookBites and library loans
The study is based on two extensive datasets: A national database of library loans for 200,431 pupils in Years 3–5 as well as usage data from the reading app BookBites for 24,539 pupils in 15 Danish municipalities

These data provide insight into the children’s actual behaviour – not simply what they say they do when asked. The researchers found, among other things, that girls generally spend more time reading in BookBites and borrow more books from libraries than boys.

“But we can also see that the differences in reading time between girls and boys increased during the first two COVID‑19 lockdowns. The girls continued reading, which suggests that their reading interest and skills give them an advantage when the usual structure provided by school disappears,” Blaabæk explains.

The findings are published in the article “Gender gaps in reading increase during unplanned and planned school closures” in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

Kindergarten Screening for Early (Grade 1) and Late-Emerging (Grade 4) Dyslexia Risk

Complete report

Key Points

Question  Can cognitive-linguistic screening in kindergarten identify children at risk for both early-emerging (grade 1) and late-emerging (grade 4) dyslexia?

Findings  In this cohort study of 515 Hebrew-speaking children, kindergarten letter knowledge and phonological awareness deficits were associated with a 4- to 5-fold increased risk of dyslexia in grade 1, and letter knowledge, morphological awareness, and rapid automatized naming deficits were associated with a 2.4- to 3.6-fold increased risk in grade 4, independent of grade 1 dyslexia risk.

Meaning  These findings provide foundational evidence to support the integration of developmentally sensitive dyslexia screening within pediatric surveillance frameworks, facilitating a shift from reactive identification to preventive care, including for late-emerging dyslexia risk.

Abstract

Importance  Pediatric primary care offers a unique opportunity for early dyslexia screening, yet validated prereading measures capturing the full spectrum of developmental risk are absent from standard assessments, representing a critical gap in preventive care. Establishing predictive validity of these measures is essential before clinical implementation.

Objective  To examine whether and to what extent deficits in 4 cognitive-linguistic domains in kindergarten estimate risk for both early-emerging (grade 1) and late-emerging (grade 4) dyslexia.

Design, Setting, and Participants  This prospective longitudinal cohort study was conducted at 128 kindergartens and 60 public elementary schools representing diverse socioeconomic backgrounds in northern Israel from May 2019 to June 2023. Hebrew-speaking children who demonstrated age-appropriate nonverbal abilities (as assessed with the Raven Progressive Matrices) were included.

Exposures  Exposures included 4 cognitive-linguistic measures, (1) phonological awareness, (2) rapid automatized naming, (3) letter knowledge, and (4) morphological awareness, assessed in kindergarten (May to June 2019).

Main Outcomes and Measures  The primary outcome was dyslexia risk in grades 1 (January to March 2020) and 4 (February to June 2023), defined as word-reading fluency at or below the 10th percentile. Cognitive-linguistic and word-reading fluency composite scores were computed by averaging raw scores from 2 to 3 tasks. Logistic regression was used to estimate associations of cognitive-linguistic measures with dyslexia risk, which were expressed as odds ratios (ORs) with 95% CIs.

Results  Among 515 Hebrew-speaking children (285 girls [55.3%]; mean [SD] age, 5.9 [0.4] years), kindergarten deficits in letter knowledge (OR, 4.75; 95% CI, 2.04-11.04; P < .001) and phonological awareness (OR, 4.17; 95% CI, 2.05-8.47; P < .001) were associated with a 4- to 5-fold increased risk of dyslexia in grade 1. Deficits in letter knowledge (OR, 3.57; 95% CI, 1.53-8.31; P = .003), morphological awareness (OR, 2.56; 95% CI, 1.09-5.97; P = .03), and rapid automatized naming (OR, 2.39; 95% CI, 1.05-5.43; P = .04) were associated with a 2.4- to 3.6-fold increased risk of dyslexia in grade 4, independently of grade 1 risk (OR, 4.98; 95% CI, 2.22-11.13; P < .001).

Conclusions and Relevance  In this cohort study of 515 children followed from kindergarten through grades 1 and 4, distinct patterns of cognitive-linguistic deficits in kindergarten were associated with 2- to 5-fold increased risk for early- and late-emerging dyslexia. These findings provide a foundational evidence base to support the integration of developmentally sensitive screening into pediatric surveillance frameworks, facilitating early identification and a shift from reactive to preventive care, including for children at risk of late-emerging dyslexia.

Low-income students and girls are steered away from “risky” creative careers at school

 

Schools, families and social pressures are channelling young people – especially girls and poorer students – away from studying creative subjects because they are considered low-status or financially “risky”, a report says.

The University of Cambridge study argues that the underrepresentation of women and people from lower-income backgrounds in the creative industries reflects a “narrowing pathway” that begins at school, and steers students away from subjects like art, music and drama as their education progresses.

The study, funded by the social and economic well-being charity, the Nuffield Foundation, used the educational records of 1.7 million students in England, longitudinal data about 7,200 young people’s progress into work, and interviews and surveys with people studying and working in creative fields.

Although almost half of 14-year-olds said they enjoyed creative subjects, just one in 25 was working in a creative occupation by their early 30s. In between, the study found that participation drops at every stage: at GCSE, post-16 and in higher education. The fall-off is especially steep among poorer students and girls, with girls from lower-income backgrounds facing a “double disadvantage”.

The report is particularly critical of underlying educational “hierarchies” – the low status of both creative subjects, and of creative qualifications from further education (FE) colleges.

Professor Sonia Ilie, from Cambridge’s Faculty of Education, said: “If you have a university degree in a creative subject, you are much more likely to end up in a creative career. Young people from low-income families, however, and especially girls, are less likely to reach the point where studying for a creative degree is even an option.”

“That reflects wider societal structures, inequalities, cultural messaging and pressure on schools to deliver academic results. We need a more thoughtful conversation about the value of creative subjects – and frankly about the snobbery that still surrounds certain qualifications.”

While class inequalities in the creative sector have been raised in previous reports, the Cambridge study explored the problem’s underlying educational dynamics. The researchers mapped young people’s trajectories into and out of creative subjects such as art, dance, design, drama, media studies, music and photography; among others.

The longitudinal data showed that 42% of 14-year-olds indicated a preference for a creative subject, with girls more likely to do so than boys. This, however, did not translate into sustained study as they advanced through the education system.

Using the large-scale data from educational records, the study found that at age 16, 24.7% of students had made a creative subject choice. This proportion then fell to 16.9% post-16, and further, to 12.2%, at university. Only 3.8% of students who reached higher education had made creative subject choices at every possible stage.

Students eligible for free school meals (FSM) – a proxy for those from less wealthy backgrounds – were more likely than their peers to choose creative subjects at GCSE, but less likely to do so after 16. Girls were more likely than boys to choose creative subjects into post-16 education, but at university, the pattern reversed, with thousands of young women leaving the creative pathway before higher education.

The report describes a “push-pull” dynamic behind these trends. While many young people enjoy creative subjects – and some schools, colleges and universities offer substantial tailored support – they are often urged to prioritise “academic” subjects and advised that creative careers will involve greater financial risk.

Study participants said that teachers, family and friends had discouraged them from creative study. This does not reflect statutory guidance for schools, the report notes, but “seems to reflect cultural hierarchies that devalue creative work”.

Students from less wealthy families may also lack the resources to pursue creative interests, or the networks to break into the creative industries. Many cannot afford the unpaid internships or portfolio-building opportunities that often represent the first step in a creative career. At the same time, the report acknowledges the challenging reality of creative work: study participants often described this as hard and precarious – if artistically rewarding.

The report also highlights the often-underestimated role of FE colleges in creative education. It describes a “bifurcated system” in which hands-on creative education is concentrated in FE, but few FE students have the same employment opportunities as their university-educated peers. The mismatch means that disadvantaged students may face barriers to furthering their creative careers despite thriving in FE.

The study calls for a clearer post-16 framework to help students navigate the range of creative qualifications available in FE, and for universities and employers to recognise and value further education more. Ilie suggested that the Government’s newly announced vocational V-levels could help to make the system more navigable.

“The FE offer we saw in our study is clearly on a par with so-called ‘academic’ routes and is producing amazing students who could succeed in creative degrees and jobs,” Professor Pamela Burnard, co-lead on the study, said. “Equally, just because university is not a preferred route for some should not mean that they cannot access future employment.”

The report urges a system-wide rethink of how creative talent is supported. The authors argue for schools and policymakers to challenge the hierarchies that prize academic routes over creative options, and to provide students with clear, but also realistic, advice about how to pursue creative employment. They also call for targeted initiatives to support creative education among girls, low-income students and those in deprived areas.

“If things stay as they are, the patterns that develop throughout students’ educational careers are more likely to perpetuate inequalities in the creative industries, rather than disrupt them,” Ilie added.

Dr Emily Tanner, Education Programme Head at the Nuffield Foundation said: "With creative industries identified as among the highest-potential sectors in the UK's Industrial Strategy, this research is timely. It shows that ensuring equitable access to opportunities will require concerted action to remove barriers for girls and young people from disadvantaged backgrounds."

The full report will be available on the Faculty of Education website.

Self-esteem, openness to LGBTQ peers helps all high schoolers

 For teens entering high school, inclusive environments benefit not only students identifying as LGBTQ but also their majority‑group peers, new Cornell University‑led psychology research finds. And for LGBTQ students, who start ninth grade more anxious on average, a strong sense of self can significantly ease those feelings over time.

Those findings, from two studies published in the Journal of Adolescence and the Journal of Clinical Child & Adolescent Psychology that followed more than 400 students through ninth and 10th grade, highlight the value of cultivating self‑esteem and openness during a critical developmental period.

In the first study, the researchers surveyed 367 cisgender heterosexual and LGBTQ teens (average age 14) five times over the first 18 months of high school. LGBTQ participants reported significantly higher anxiety at the start, consistent with theory that predicts greater mental health challenges for minority students concerned about their identities being accepted or rejected.

But unexpectedly, LGBTQ students who started high school with high self-esteem showed the biggest decrease in anxiety during the study period. In contrast, anxiety remained relatively stable among non-LGBTQ students.

“Symptoms of anxiety are universally experienced, but having strong self‑esteem is very protective, particularly for LGBTQ youth," said Robert Klein, doctoral candidate in psychology and first author of both studies.

The second study, including 287 cisgender heterosexual teens drawn from the same sample spanning 38 schools in Michigan, is the first to apply a theory developed in the study of race and ethnicity, called “other group orientation,” to gender identity and sexual orientation. Understanding majority group attitudes toward LGBTQ adolescents is increasingly important, the researchers said, given the growing numbers of teenagers who openly identify as LGBTQ.

To measure the high schoolers’ openness and willingness to interact with LGBTQ peers, the students answered questions over the study period such as, “I like meeting and getting to know LGBTQ people,” and “I often spend time with LGBTQ people.” The results showed a slight increase in openness over time — perhaps resulting from greater exposure to LGBTQ peers and issues, the researchers said. That in turn was associated with the majority-group students feeling more connected to society and that the world is getting better.

“There seems to be this exposure effect that as people are around these identities more, they become more positively oriented toward them,” Klein said.

The researchers said the findings support school-based efforts to promote self-esteem and affirming environments, particularly for LGBTQ youth reporting elevated anxiety when entering high school. 

For additional information, read this Cornell Chronicle story.

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Chicago robot tutors are teaching SEL effectively–without pretending to be human

n a crowded fourth-grade classroom in Chicago, a new kind of tutor is shaping how children learn about empathy, conflict, and problem-solving. These robots aren’t programmed to act like friendly classmates with invented emotions and backstories. Instead, they speak plainly, without pretense or fiction, and the results will catch educators’ attention across the country.

The research behind it, led by PhD student Lauren Wright and overseen by Assistant Professor Sarah Sebo at the University of Chicago’s Department of Computer Science, came together thanks to robust partnerships: Chicago Public Schools (CPS) provided access to classrooms and teachers, and Kiljoong Kim at Chapin Hall built crucial connections that made this cross-institution project possible.

“With this work, we wanted to create a team that would be able to uniquely design and study technology, informed by best practices in SEL education, with the input of principals, administrators, teachers, and students in Chicago Public Schools,” said Sebo. “We started not with a specific robot prototype, but by observing SEL instruction in CPS classrooms and talking with teachers about their experiences with SEL, and THEN starting to think about how robots might be able to supplement the amazing work teachers are already doing in schools.“

This research was presented at the 2026 ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) held in Edinburgh, Scotland, the top venue for human-robot interaction research, where the team not only shared their findings with the broader academic community, but also learned they had won the Best Paper Award—an honor that recognizes the most impactful and innovative research at the conference.

For teachers in CPS, SEL lessons usually mean whole-class activities delivered once a week. In practice, however, many students tune out, and overstretched teachers would love more one-on-one opportunities.Teachers interviewed in the study expressed concern that group SEL lessons rarely reach every child. This perspective, along with careful classroom observation and interviews, drove the research team to look for solutions.

Wright’s team spotted the gap and asked whether robots could supplement teachers and provide individualized instruction where group lessons fall short. Did it actually matter if those robots ‘acted’ human?

In the experiment, fifty-two students participated. One group learned SEL from robots with fictional, emotion-laden dialogue. Another worked with robots that spoke only in factual terms, openly acknowledging they had no feelings or friends. The third group received their regular curriculum with no robot involvement. By leveraging Second Step’s curriculum, made possible through connections with Chapin Hall and Kiljoong Kim, the research team ensured the lessons reflected real classroom needs. Robots adapted group lesson plans into personalized conversations, while teachers continued focusing on the rest of their students.

Both robot groups showed students improved in their mastery of SEL concepts compared to peers who only had classroom instruction. Yet, the factual robots, in their straightforward honesty, often encouraged deeper engagement with lesson vocabulary and problem-solving language. These findings challenge conventional wisdom.

“Giving robots fictional personalities with the intent to make them more engaging is a common approach to educational robots, one which feels especially relevant for teaching SEL,” expressed Wright. “However, in our research study, we found that the robot’s fictional emotions and experiences may have distracted or made students feel less comfortable using lesson language. These findings challenge us to reconsider our assumptions when designing robot behaviors – just because an approach is common doesn’t mean it will always lead to the best outcomes.“

Honest Robots, Authentic Impact

As society becomes more concerned about children forming unhealthy attachments to AI, the Chicago team’s results provide timely guidance. Demonstrating that factual robots can perform as well or better without mimicking emotions points the way to a safer classroom technology.

The central message of the study is clear. Robots are powerful supplements, extending teachers’ capabilities and freeing up attention for students who need more support. But they do not replace the human element in teaching.

“We firmly believe that human teachers are the most important element in elementary education,” said Sebo. “As we all experienced during the pandemic, replacing in-person educational experiences with technology-mediated ones can be disastrous. Our work does not seek to replace human teachers, but instead, aims to create robot tools that extend a teacher’s reach, giving the ability to provide children with one-on-one attention without pulling them away from the rest of the class.”

As this school year winds down, Chicago’s classroom experiment stands as proof of what partnership-driven innovation can achieve in education. The findings invite other districts to rethink how technology can responsibly supplement teachers and ensure every child receives meaningful, individualized support.