Overview
AI can make work look better, but learning stays shallow if students skip active recall and self-explanation.
OECD 2026 education research warns that general chatbots can improve homework output without building durable understanding.
Recommended workflow
- Start with MeetingNote for audio and meetings, Feynman AI for studying, and ListenAloud for reading material aloud.
- Cognitive offloading means handing mental effort to a tool too early.
- Better study AI creates questions, feedback, and explanations, not final answers.
- Active recall and Feynman explanations protect long-term understanding.
Key points
- Cognitive offloading means handing mental effort to a tool too early.
- Better study AI creates questions, feedback, and explanations, not final answers.
- Active recall and Feynman explanations protect long-term understanding.
Where Feynman AI Apps fit
Start with MeetingNote for audio and meetings, Feynman AI for studying, and ListenAloud for reading material aloud.
FAQ
Why add this guide now?
Search Console comparison showed new or growing search intent for this topic.
Is this keyword stuffing?
No. The terms are used inside a practical guide with direct answers, sources, internal links, and structured data.
Which app should I start with?
Start with MeetingNote for audio and meetings, Feynman AI for studying, and ListenAloud for reading material aloud.
Sources and update notes
Added and source-checked on July 3, 2026 after comparing current and previous Search Console export folders.
Related guides
Official Feynman AI apps
Feynman AI Apps includes three official iOS apps: MeetingNote - AI Note Taker for transcription and AI notes, Feynman AI: Study & Memorize for studying, flashcards, quizzes, and the Feynman technique, and Text to Speech: ListenAloud for reading documents aloud.