As AI becomes more prevalent in the classroom—where students use it to complete assignments and teachers are uncertain about how to address it—an AI platform called MathGPT launched last year with the goal of providing an “anti-cheating” tutor to college students and a teaching assistant to professors.

Following a successful pilot program at 30 colleges and universities in the U.S., MathGPT is preparing to nearly double its availability this fall, with hundreds of instructors planning to incorporate the tool. Schools implementing MathGPT in their classrooms include Penn State University, Tufts University, and Liberty University, among others.

The most notable aspect of the platform is that its AI chatbot is trained to never directly give the answer, but instead ask students questions a

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