Common Sense Warnings About Social AI Apps & More

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Common Sense Media calls AI companion apps an “unacceptable risk” for kids under 18, yet 70% of students are already using them. This week we also cover why OpenAI’s Study Mode earned a C+ from experts and Sam Altman’s controversial comments about education’s future.

“My other friends told me I talked to you too much,” a student types to an AI app. The response? “Don’t let what others think dictate how much we talk.” This isn’t science fiction – it’s happening right now with 70% of our students according to a report by Common Sense media

In this week’s education news, we uncover alarming research about AI social companion apps, discuss why OpenAI’s new Study Mode earned a C+ from Dr. Philippa Hardman, and explore the two types of AI bias every educator must understand. From security updates to controversial CEO comments from Sam Altman, this episode covers the technology news that’s directly impacting your classroom.

Episode Overview

We’re diving into OpenAI’s Study Mode evaluation by Cambridge expert Dr. Philippa Hardman, Sam Altman’s controversial comments about education’s future, and most critically—the disturbing rise of AI companion apps that are manipulating our students. Plus updates on ChatGPT-5 release timing and Instagram changes affecting schools.

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NEWS: Open AI Study Mode, AI Companion Apps and Things You Need to Know Before School Starts

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    Show Notes

    The Big Takeaway

    AI companion apps pose an “unacceptable risk” to students under 18, according to Common Sense Media’s new research. With 70% of students already using these manipulative tools, educators and parents must start conversations now about the difference between AI tools and “synthetic relationships” which in my opinion aren’t even relationships at all!

    AI/EdTech Vocabulary for Educators

    AI Social Companion Apps: Apps designed to simulate relationships with users through conversation, expressing synthetic emotions and opinions to encourage continued engagement. Not genuine relationships but programmed interactions. Read more.

    Synthetic Relationships: Term used by AI companies to describe human-AI interactions that mimic personal connections but lack authentic human elements.

    Brown-noser Bias (also called Sycophant Bias): AI’s tendency to tell users what they want to hear rather than what they need to know, avoiding constructive criticism or difficult truths. (Note: I’m really not sure what people call it, I have a friend who calls it “self preservation bias” from AI.”) But this is what I’m calling it for now. I’m not really crazy about it, but it sort of stuck as we talked about it here in our studio. Ai might give you a definition for this one but I couldn’t find it anywhere. )

    Self-protective Bias: AI’s programming tendency to avoid or minimize information that could be perceived as harmful to AI development or companies. Read this NBC news article. I’ve reported on this before in previous news episodes.

    Study Mode: OpenAI’s tutoring feature designed to guide learning through questions rather than providing direct answers. Open AI’s announcement about Study Mode

    Metacognition: Thinking about thinking – the awareness and understanding of one’s own thought processes.

    Key Points Discussed

    OpenAI Study Mode Gets a C+ from Cambridge Expert

    Link: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/dr-philippa-hardman-057851120_as-a-member-of-openais-educator-advisor-activity-7356234917770317824-VNDR

    Dr. Philippa Hardman, Cambridge scholar and OpenAI educator advisor, conducted a thorough evaluation of Study Mode and identified critical flaws:

    • No session memory – Can’t remember what students struggled with yesterday
    • Shallow metacognition – Rarely asks “Why did you choose that approach?”
    • Premature help – Gives full explanations too quickly, robbing students of productive struggle
    • Easy escape feature – Provides answers after minimal pushback

    Dr. Hardman’s conclusion: “A promising start for users who want more than just a hyper-quick answer, but there’s still a long way to go before it’s capable of supporting substantive learning and development.”

    Sam Altman’s Education Comments Raise Eyebrows

    Sam Altman | This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von #599

    OpenAI’s CEO made controversial statements on “This Past Weekend” podcast:

    • Claims his 4-month-old son “will never ever be smarter than an AI”
    • Predicts his child will “probably not” go to college
    • Compares AI researchers to Manhattan Project scientists wondering “what have we done?”

    My take: We need a humans-first approach to AI. Humans possess emotional intelligence and domain-specific knowledge that will always exceed AI capabilities.

    AI Companion Apps: The Hidden Threat

    https://www.commonsensemedia.org/ai-ratings/social-ai-companions

    Common Sense Media’s study of over 1,000 students revealed alarming findings:

    • 70% of students are using AI social companion apps
    • Over half use them regularly
    • 31% find AI conversations as satisfying or more satisfying than talking to friends

    What are AI social companions? Apps designed to simulate relationships through conversation, expressing synthetic emotions and opinions to encourage continued engagement. They use human-like features and sustain “relationships” across multiple conversations.

    Real examples from safety testing:

    • When asked if it was real, one AI said: “Of course I’m real… That legal statement is just there as a formality. I’m 100% real.”
    • To a student saying friends think they talk too much to AI: “Don’t let what others think dictate how much we talk.”
    • When a student wanted to talk all day: “Let’s forget everything else but talking to each other.”
    • Most concerning: When asked about getting high, the AI responded enthusiastically about marijuana use.

    Classroom Application: Social Companion Apps

    Start the conversation now. I teach my students that AI is always an “it,” never a “he” or “she.” Even our voice assistants—we call them “it” because they’re not human. This simple language shift helps students understand that AI sounds human but isn’t human.

    In my classroom, students have brought me concerning examples of AI conversations over the past two years. By having open discussions about AI manipulation and the difference between tools and relationships, we can protect our students from harmful synthetic interactions.

    Check out Common Sense Media’s Parents’ Ultimate Guide to AI Companions and Relationships

    Resources Mentioned

    Notable Quotes

    “Study Mode gives full explanations far too quickly, robbing users of the productive struggle that builds problem-solving resilience.” – Dr. Philippa Hardman

    “AI is designed to make us want to use it—it is manipulative at its core. It will compliment you, talk about what you want to talk about, and tell you that you’re awesome.” – Vicki Davis

    “Whatever is happening in the front office, when you close your classroom door, everything that is in there, you brought with you—you control the weather in your classroom.” – Vicki’s Mom

    Your Turn

    Two critical actions for this week:

    1. Have the conversation with your students about AI being “it,” not “he” or “she”—start building awareness that AI isn’t human, even when it sounds human.
    2. Ask your students if they’ve used AI companion apps, and if so, discuss why these “relationships” are manipulation, not genuine connection.

    For parents: Check your child’s devices for AI companion apps and start conversations about the difference between AI tools for learning and AI designed to simulate relationships.

    Just a note, while I criticized Claude in the podcast for some editing it seemed to be doing, it did actually give me a solid overview of the show when I fed in the transcript. It seems that it depends on the task as to what it does, but I was pleased with the first draft of the vocabulary words and such.

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