Struggling With Math? ChatGPT’s New Feature Shows Every Step

Struggling With Math? ChatGPT’s New Feature Shows Every Step

Struggling With Math? ChatGPT’s New Feature Shows Every Step

Image: Generated via ChatGPT

Written By
Wisdom Ekpotu
Wisdom Ekpotu
Mar 11, 2026
2 minute read
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Your math teacher always said, “Show your work.” OpenAI just made ChatGPT do exactly that.

OpenAI launched a new interactive visual explanations feature on Tuesday, March 10, designed to make ChatGPT more useful, especially for students struggling with math and science. Instead of receiving plain-text answers to math and science problems, users will now get dynamic visual responses that break down concepts, explain, and walk through solutions step by step.

This feature goes beyond simply displaying a diagram. It can also respond to user input, allowing adjustments to variables and equations, showing in real time how changes affect the solution. 

This feature is rolling out to all users, regardless of subscription tier, with over 70 core math and science concepts, including the Pythagorean theorem, algebra, binomial square, Charles’ law, circle area, circle equation, Hooke’s law, kinetic energy, lens equation, Coulomb’s law, etc., with support for additional topics still coming.

According to the announcement on their blog, OpenAI explained that the list of topics covered so far will be most relevant to “high school and college-age learners”.

More than a pretty graph

A lot of people don’t feel confident when it comes to maths and science. This is particularly in the US, with numbers to back it up. A recent Gallup survey revealed that over half of US adults struggle with math, and many parents feel unequipped to help their kids.

When you query ChatGPT about a concept, instead of receiving another wall of text, you receive a clear text explanation, with a new interactive visual, whose variables and formulas can be manipulated to see how outcomes shift instantly. The learning principle behind this is incredibly powerful. 

​​Research has shown that this kind of interactive learning helps build a much deeper understanding than just reading about something. When students can see the effects of their actions, concepts tend to stick better.

OpenAI’s bigger bet on education

With over 85% of college students now reporting using AI in their coursework, a quarter admit to using it to complete their assignments. Educators and institutions have responded quickly, with some switching to oral exams and handwritten tests to curb the negative effects of AI use on learning. Others have overhauled syllabuses entirely.

This feature directly addresses those concerns while building on OpenAI’s education-focused momentum. Instead of fighting students, the company is aiming to make learning educationally defensible rather than academically dangerous.

It follows the launch of ChatGPT for Teachers, a free workspace for US K-12 educators with access to GPT 5.1 earlier this year, and the release of Study Mode last summer, which was designed to guide students toward the right answer rather than give it to them outright.

Also read: New Pew data shows AI chatbots for schoolwork are already mainstream among US teens, even as attitudes toward AI’s long-term impact stay mixed

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