Sal Khan’s AIDriven Learning Model Reshapes Global Education Sal Khan’s AIDriven Learning Model Reshapes Global Education

By 2026, Sal Khan – behind Khan Academy – is back shaping big shifts in how classrooms work across the planet. Instead of just videos, the platform uses artificial intelligence to walk learners through problems bit by bit. This tool, called Khanmigo, adjusts its way of explaining things based on who’s asking – not one-size-fits-all. While it covers topics like algebra or history, its real strength shows when someone gets stuck late at night. Because it learns how people think, responses feel less robotic, more like talking with a patient helper. Countries facing gaps in teaching staff have started folding similar smart tutoring into regular school lessons. Even in crowded schools, kids can pause, retry, and move forward without waiting their turn. Though tech runs underneath, what users see feels quiet, calm, focused only on next steps. 

What drives Khan is breaking lessons into small chunks, mixing in immediate responses so users can go back over ideas, work through exercises, then get fixes right away instead of sitting on confusion until test day. Found strong results among poorer areas and remote regions because kids pull down videos onto phones or tablets they already own, opening doors to learning that matches what wealthier schools offer. In countries like India, across much of Central and South America, also scattered zones in Africa, officials teamed up with the platform to hand out online books at no cost, build better skills for educators, plus roll out smart software helping teachers shape daily classes more effectively.