--- title: "World Bank Group: From Chalkboard to Chatbots – Evaluating the Impact of Generative AI on Learning Outcomes in Nigeria" slug: "world-bank-group-from-chalkboard-to-chatbots-evaluating-the-impact-of-generative-ai-on-learning-outcomes-in-nigeria" author: "Jeremy Weaver" date: "2025-06-11 06:23:00" category: "Premium" topics: "Impact of Generative AI on Student Learning Outcomes, Cost-Effectiveness of AI-Powered Tutoring, Heterogeneous Effects Across Student Demographics, The Impact of Attendance on Learning Gains, Policy Implications for AI in Low-Resource Educational Settings" summary: "A World Bank working paper finds that using a GPT-4-powered virtual tutor in Nigerian secondary schools significantly boosts English, digital, and AI skills, with stronger gains for higher-performing, female, and higher socioeconomic students. The intervention proved highly cost-effective, equating to 1.5–2 years of traditional schooling and suggesting that scalable AI tutoring can enhance learning in low-resource settings, provided challenges like digital equity are addressed." banner: "" thumbnail: "" ---



Summary of Read Full Report (PDF)

This is a Policy Research Working Paper from the World Bank's Education Global Department, published in May 2025. Titled "From Chalkboards to Chatbots: Evaluating the Impact of Generative AI on Learning Outcomes in Nigeria," it details a study on the effectiveness of using large language models, specifically Microsoft Copilot powered by GPT-4, as virtual tutors for secondary school students in Nigeria.

The research, conducted through a randomized controlled trial over six weeks, found that the intervention led to significant improvements in English, digital, and AI skills among participating students, particularly female students and those with higher initial academic performance.

The paper emphasizes the cost-effectiveness and scalability of this AI-powered tutoring approach in low-resource settings, although it also highlights the need to address potential inequities in access and digital literacy for broader implementation.