Sal Khan says A.I. can help teachers create ‘an exceptional classroom’: Full interview
AI in education: Khan's vision for personalization
Sal Khan, founder of Khan Academy, has emerged as one of the leading voices at the intersection of education and artificial intelligence. In a recent interview, Khan shared his evolving perspective on how AI tools—particularly their new Khanmigo platform—can fundamentally transform teaching and learning experiences. Rather than replacing teachers, Khan sees AI as an amplifier of good pedagogy, creating possibilities for personalization at scale that were previously unimaginable.
Key insights from Khan's perspective
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AI's primary value in education is enabling personalization—giving every student their own AI tutor that provides immediate feedback, guidance, and support in a way that's impossible for even the most dedicated teacher managing 30+ students.
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Khan Academy's Khanmigo tool functions as an AI teaching assistant that helps both educators and students—providing personalized explanations, generating practice problems, offering writing feedback, and even roleplaying historical figures for deeper engagement.
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The technology aims to solve education's fundamental challenge: providing students individualized attention and immediate feedback when they're actually working through problems and developing understanding.
The transformative potential of AI companions in learning
What struck me most about Khan's vision is how it addresses education's persistent "ratio problem." Traditional classrooms force one teacher to divide attention among dozens of students, making truly personalized instruction nearly impossible. Khan's insight isn't merely that AI can automate grading or content delivery—it's that AI can fundamentally change the economics of personalized attention.
This matters tremendously because education research consistently shows the effectiveness of one-on-one tutoring. Studies from University of Chicago's Urban Education Lab found that individualized math tutoring increased learning rates by 2-3x compared to traditional instruction. The challenge has always been scalability and cost. AI tutoring systems could democratize access to personalized learning support that was previously available only to the most privileged students.
Beyond the interview: AI's broader educational impact
While Khan offers a compelling vision, there are dimensions of AI's educational impact worth exploring beyond what the interview covered. The integration of AI tutors raises important questions about data privacy and algorithmic bias. Schools implementing these systems need robust frameworks for protecting student information and ensuring AI systems don't perpetuate existing educational inequities.
A case study worth noting comes from Bakp
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