We Tested Khan Academy’s AI Tutor for 30 Days: Here’s What Happened

My 10-year-old was struggling with fractions.

Not “I hate math” struggling. More like “I understand it in class but forget it by homework time” struggling.

So we tried Khanmigo — Khan Academy’s AI tutor. Cost: $9/month. Promised: personalized tutoring that helps kids learn (not just gives answers).

Here’s what actually happened over 30 days.

What Is Khanmigo?

Khanmigo is Khan Academy’s AI-powered tutor built on GPT-4. Think ChatGPT, but designed specifically for education.

Key features:

  • Socratic tutoring (AI asks questions instead of giving answers)
  • Parent dashboard (see what your kid is working on)
  • Safety guardrails (won’t help with off-topic stuff or cheating)
  • Works across subjects (math, science, reading, writing)

Cost: $9/month (or $99/year)

Ages: Elementary through high school (though Khan Academy itself is free for all ages)

Week 1: The Setup (Easier Than Expected)

How to get started:

  1. Go to khanacademy.org
  2. Sign up (free account)
  3. Upgrade to Khanmigo ($9/month)
  4. Link parent account (optional but recommended)

First impressions:

  • Clean interface (no ads, no distractions)
  • AI introduces itself as a tutor (not a homework-doer)
  • My daughter clicked around, asked it random questions, tested boundaries

What she asked:

  • “Can you do my homework for me?” → AI said no, offered to help her work through it
  • “What’s the answer to 3/4 + 1/2?” → AI asked her to think about common denominators first
  • “Why do I need to learn fractions?” → AI gave a real-world example (baking, splitting pizza)

My take: The AI stays in “tutor mode” consistently. It won’t just spit out answers.

Week 2: The Math Test (Fractions)

The challenge: Homework on adding/subtracting fractions with unlike denominators.

What happened:

  • She opened Khanmigo, typed: “I don’t understand how to add 2/3 and 1/4”
  • AI didn’t give the answer — it asked: “What’s the first step when the denominators are different?”
  • She guessed: “Make them the same?”
  • AI confirmed, then asked: “What number could both 3 and 4 divide into evenly?”

Back-and-forth went like this:

  • Her: “12?”
  • AI: “Exactly! Now, how do you convert 2/3 into a fraction with 12 as the denominator?”
  • Her: “…I multiply the top and bottom by 4?”
  • AI: “Yes! So 2/3 becomes…?”
  • Her: “8/12!”
  • AI: “Perfect. Now try converting 1/4.”

Result: She solved it herself. The AI guided, didn’t solve.

My take: This is actual tutoring. If you want instant answers, this will frustrate you. If you want learning, it works.

Week 3: The Writing Assignment (Essay Outlining)

The challenge: 5-paragraph essay on “Why reading is important.”

What she asked Khanmigo:

  • “Can you write my essay?”
  • AI: “I can’t write it for you, but I can help you organize your ideas. What’s your main point?”

The process:

  1. AI asked her to brainstorm 3 reasons why reading matters
  2. She listed: “You learn new things, it’s fun, you get better at writing”
  3. AI helped her turn those into topic sentences
  4. AI asked: “What’s an example of something you learned from a book?”
  5. She gave an example, AI showed her how to turn it into a supporting detail

Result: She wrote the essay herself, but with a clear structure.

My take: Khanmigo is great for scaffolding (building structure), not ghostwriting. If your kid wants AI to do the work, this isn’t it.

Week 4: The Science Project (Research Help)

The challenge: Research project on photosynthesis.

What she asked Khanmigo:

  • “Explain photosynthesis”
  • AI gave a kid-friendly explanation (plants use sunlight to make food)
  • Then asked: “What questions do you have about how this works?”

She drilled deeper:

  • “Why do plants need sunlight?”
  • “What’s chlorophyll?”
  • “Do all plants do photosynthesis?”

What impressed me:

  • AI adjusted language based on her questions (started simple, got more detailed as she asked follow-ups)
  • Kept checking for understanding (“Does that make sense? Want me to explain it differently?”)
  • Suggested she watch a Khan Academy video on the topic (didn’t just rely on text)

Result: She wrote her project in her own words, but with solid understanding.

My take: Better than Googling (which often leads to overwhelming Wikipedia articles). The AI meets kids where they are.

What Worked Really Well

1. The AI Won’t Cheat for You

Example: She tried asking “What’s the answer to #7 on my worksheet?”

AI response: “I can’t see your worksheet, but I can help you figure out #7. What’s the question?”

She typed the question. AI walked her through the problem step-by-step.

Why this matters: Khanmigo has strong guardrails. It’s designed to prevent academic dishonesty.

2. Parent Dashboard Actually Useful

Every week, I checked the parent dashboard:

  • Time spent: ~2-3 hours/week
  • Topics explored: Fractions, essay writing, photosynthesis, random “how do airplanes fly” curiosity
  • Conversation transcripts: Full visibility (I could read everything she asked)

Why this matters: I’m not hovering over her shoulder, but I know what she’s learning.

3. Works for Homework and Curiosity

About half her Khanmigo time was homework help. The other half was random questions:

  • “How do magnets work?”
  • “Why is the sky blue?”
  • “What’s the biggest number?”

The AI engaged with all of it. Homework tutor and curiosity engine.

Why this matters: Learning isn’t just homework. Khanmigo rewards curiosity.

What Didn’t Work (Or Could Be Better)

1. Sometimes Too Socratic

Example: She asked “What’s a prime number?”

AI asked: “What do you think a prime number is?”

She said: “I have no idea, that’s why I’m asking.”

AI then explained, but the “answer a question with a question” approach sometimes felt frustrating when she genuinely had zero prior knowledge.

My take: Socratic method works great for review or guided problem-solving. Less great for brand-new concepts.

2. Can’t Upload Photos of Worksheets

She wanted to snap a photo of her math worksheet and ask for help.

Khanmigo doesn’t support image uploads (yet). She had to type out the problem.

Why it matters: Typing math problems (especially fractions/exponents) is annoying. Photo upload would be huge.

3. Not Great for Advanced High School (Yet)

We tested it with a high school friend (AP Calculus). Khanmigo struggled with:

  • Multivariable calculus
  • Advanced physics problems
  • College-level essay analysis

It’s solid for K-12 core subjects, but not a replacement for specialized tutoring in advanced topics.

My take: If your kid is in AP classes, Khanmigo might feel limiting.

Khanmigo vs. ChatGPT (The Obvious Question)

Why not just use ChatGPT for free?

We tried both. Here’s the difference:

Feature Khanmigo ChatGPT (Free)
Will give direct answers No Yes
Socratic tutoring Yes Sometimes (if you prompt it right)
Parent dashboard Yes No
Safety guardrails for kids Yes No (ChatGPT will answer anything)
Subject-specific scaffolding Yes (built-in Khan Academy content) No (generic AI)
Cost $9/month Free

Bottom line: If you want learning + accountability, Khanmigo is worth $9. If you want instant answers, ChatGPT is free (but also enables cheating).

Who Should Use Khanmigo (And Who Shouldn’t)

✅ Great for:

  • Kids who need homework help (but shouldn’t cheat)
  • Parents who want visibility (dashboard shows what kid is working on)
  • Curious kids (AI engages with random questions, not just homework)
  • Families comfortable with AI (who want guardrails)

❌ Not ideal for:

  • Kids who want instant answers (this AI won’t comply)
  • Advanced high school students (AP/college-level content is limited)
  • Parents who want AI to replace tutoring entirely (it’s supplemental, not standalone)

Is It Worth $9/Month?

For us: Yes.

Here’s why:

  • Homework takes less time (she gets unstuck faster)
  • I’m not the homework police (AI handles the “how do I do this?” questions)
  • She’s actually learning (not just copying answers)
  • Parent dashboard = peace of mind (I know she’s using it for learning, not goofing off)

When it wouldn’t be worth it:

  • If your kid doesn’t struggle with homework (Khan Academy’s free content might be enough)
  • If you’re already paying for a human tutor (Khanmigo is supplemental, not a replacement)
  • If your kid is in advanced high school courses (may outgrow it quickly)

The Verdict (After 30 Days)

What my daughter said:
“It’s like having a tutor who doesn’t get annoyed when I ask the same question three times.”

What I observed:

  • Her homework frustration dropped (fewer “I don’t get this!” meltdowns)
  • She started using Khanmigo without prompting (asked it random science questions just for fun)
  • Her math quiz scores improved (small sample size, but still)

Would we keep it?
Yes. We’re on month 2 now.

Free Trial Tips

Khan Academy offers a free trial (usually 7-14 days). Here’s how to maximize it:

  1. Test it on actual homework (not just random questions)
  2. Check the parent dashboard daily (see what your kid is actually doing)
  3. Ask your kid: “Is this helping or annoying?” (their opinion matters)
  4. Compare to free alternatives (ChatGPT, Google Gemini) to see if the guardrails/dashboard are worth $9

If the trial works, keep it. If not, no commitment.


Have you tried Khanmigo? What worked (or didn’t) for your family? Drop me a line at hello@ourkidsandai.com — I’d love to hear your experience.

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