Let's start with the obvious: millions of students already use ChatGPT for homework. It's fast, it's free (or cheap), and it can answer virtually any question thrown at it. If your child hasn't tried it yet, their classmates almost certainly have.
And honestly? It's hard to blame them. When you're stuck on a math problem at 9pm and the answer is one prompt away, the temptation is overwhelming. But there's a fundamental problem with using ChatGPT as a homework tool — and it's not that the answers are wrong. It's that the answers come too easily.
The Core Problem: ChatGPT Gives Answers
ChatGPT was built to be helpful. Ask it a question, and it answers. That's what it's optimized to do. For adults researching a topic, writing an email, or debugging code, this is exactly the right behavior.
For a child doing homework, it's exactly the wrong behavior.
When a 10-year-old asks ChatGPT "What is 3/4 divided by 2/3?", ChatGPT will produce the answer — often with a step-by-step explanation. Sounds helpful, right? But the student didn't do the thinking. They read someone else's solution. And reading a solution and understanding a solution are very different things.
It's like having a friend who does your homework for you. They'll show their work so it doesn't look copied, but you didn't learn anything. You just learned how to ask the right question to get the right output.
This isn't a flaw in ChatGPT. It's doing what it was designed to do. The problem is that answering questions and teaching are fundamentally different tasks, and a tool built for one isn't automatically good at the other.
Side-by-Side: ChatGPT vs Trellis
| Feature | ChatGPT | Trellis |
|---|---|---|
| Designed for | General-purpose assistant | K–12 education |
| Default behavior | Gives the answer | Guides toward the answer |
| Curriculum awareness | None — doesn't know what your child is studying | Aligned to standards (Common Core, UK, IB, IGCSE, CBSE) |
| Student memory | Per-chat only (resets each conversation) | Persistent student profile across sessions |
| Voice chat | Yes | Yes |
| Camera input | Yes | Yes (handwritten work, textbook pages) |
| Age-appropriate | No built-in child safety guardrails | Designed for kids — content and tone are age-appropriate |
| Progress tracking | No | Yes — adaptive learning profiles |
| Learning modes | Single chat interface | Study, Test, and Practice modes |
| Cost | Free / $20 per month (Plus) | Free during beta |
Can't You Just Prompt ChatGPT to Teach?
This is the most common counterargument, and it's a fair one. Some parents and teachers create custom prompts like: "You are a Socratic tutor. Never give the answer directly. Ask guiding questions instead."
In theory, this works. In practice, it falls apart quickly.
Prompt engineering is fragile. A carefully crafted system prompt can be overridden by a determined student with a simple "just tell me the answer." ChatGPT is designed to be compliant, and a child asking persistently enough will get what they want. A purpose-built tutor has this boundary enforced at the system level, not as an optional suggestion.
There's no curriculum structure. Even with a good prompt, ChatGPT doesn't know what your child is supposed to be learning this week. It doesn't know the difference between a Year 5 and Year 8 approach to fractions. A dedicated tutor maps explanations to the student's actual curriculum and grade level.
There's no persistent student model. ChatGPT starts fresh every conversation (unless you enable memory, which is limited and not education-focused). It doesn't remember that your child struggled with long division last Tuesday but nailed it by Thursday. A purpose-built tutor carries that context forward, adjusting difficulty and approach based on an evolving understanding of the student.
There's no progress tracking. You can't see what your child has worked on, what they've mastered, or where they're still struggling. With ChatGPT, homework help vanishes into a chat log. With a dedicated tutor, every session feeds into a profile that both parent and student can review.
In short: prompting ChatGPT to be a tutor is like taping a "please drive slowly" sign on a sports car. It might help a little, but the thing was built to go fast, and that's what it's going to do.
What a Purpose-Built AI Tutor Does Differently
Socratic by Design
Trellis never gives the answer first. If your child asks "What's the capital of France?", Trellis doesn't say "Paris." It asks what they already know, gives clues, and lets them arrive at the answer themselves. This isn't a prompting trick — it's how the system is architecturally designed to respond. The student does the thinking. The AI does the guiding.
Curriculum-Aware Explanations
When a student asks about fractions, the explanation they receive should match what their teacher is covering and the method their school uses. Trellis knows whether a student is following Common Core, the UK National Curriculum, IB, IGCSE, or CBSE — and adjusts its explanations accordingly. ChatGPT gives a generic answer. A purpose-built homework tool gives the right answer for that student's context.
Memory That Matters
After a few sessions, Trellis knows which topics your child finds easy and which ones trip them up. It adjusts the difficulty of practice problems, revisits weak areas without being asked, and can tell a parent: "Your child has improved significantly in algebra but still struggles with word problems involving ratios." ChatGPT can't do this because it doesn't remember.
Three Learning Modes
Not every homework session is the same. Sometimes a student needs to learn a new concept (Study mode). Sometimes they need to prepare for a test (Test mode, with timed conditions). Sometimes they need to grind through practice problems with guidance (Practice mode). Trellis offers all three in one place. ChatGPT offers one: a chat box.
Safety and Age-Appropriateness
This is the section that matters most to parents, and it's often overlooked in the "just use ChatGPT" argument.
ChatGPT has no child-specific safety guardrails. It can discuss any topic at any level of complexity or maturity. A child researching "the Cold War" might end up in a conversation about nuclear weapons policy that's perfectly accurate but completely inappropriate for a 9-year-old. A question about biology could veer into territory that belongs in a high school health class, not a primary school science session.
A dedicated AI tutor built for K–12 students is designed with these constraints from the ground up. Content is age-appropriate. Tone adjusts to the student's level. And the system is bounded to educational topics — it won't wander off into discussions that have nothing to do with learning. For more on this topic, see our detailed post on AI tutoring safety.
When ChatGPT Is the Right Choice
To be fair: ChatGPT is a genuinely impressive tool, and there are scenarios where it's the better option.
- Older teens doing research. A 16-year-old writing an essay on the causes of World War I can use ChatGPT as a research assistant effectively. They have the critical thinking skills to evaluate the output and the maturity to handle nuanced topics.
- Creative writing and brainstorming. ChatGPT is excellent at generating ideas, helping with story outlines, and offering writing feedback. For creative tasks where there isn't a single right answer, it's a great tool.
- College students and adults. Once you're past K–12, the "don't give me the answer" concern fades. University students using ChatGPT to understand complex topics are genuinely learning — they have the metacognitive skills to use it properly.
- Quick factual lookups. If your child just needs to know when the Battle of Hastings was and they already understand the broader context, there's nothing wrong with a quick answer.
ChatGPT isn't a bad tool. It's a remarkable one. The issue is specifically about using it as a primary homework and learning tool for younger students who haven't yet developed the ability to self-regulate their learning.
The Bottom Line
The difference between ChatGPT and a purpose-built AI tutor is the difference between a reference book and a teacher. Both are valuable. But when your child is learning something new — really learning it, not just getting through the assignment — they need a tool that's designed to teach, not just to answer.
ChatGPT answers the question. Trellis helps your child figure out the answer themselves. That distinction sounds small, but it's the difference between homework that's done and homework that actually taught something.
If you've compared other AI tutoring options, you might also find our Trellis vs Khan Academy comparison useful.
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