AI as a Language Learning Partner

ABC English Online — Teacher Resource

AI as a Language Learning Partner

How learners can use AI tools for low-stakes practice, feedback, and exploration — and how teachers can shape that experience to maximise learning.

ChatGPT & Claude Prompt Engineering All Levels Emerging Practice

A Language Partner That Never Gets Tired

AI tools like ChatGPT and Claude can offer language learners something rare: an infinitely patient, always-available, non-judgmental conversation partner. The question is not whether learners are using AI — they are. The question is whether they’re using it in ways that actually develop language.

What AI Can and Cannot Do for Language Learners

Current AI language models are extraordinarily good at generating fluent, contextually appropriate language across registers, topics, and difficulty levels. They can explain grammar, correct writing, roleplay conversations, adjust their language to a learner’s level, and provide instant, patient feedback at any hour.

They are not replacements for human interaction. AI cannot reliably model authentic conversational pragmatics, cannot provide the affective dimension of human teaching, and cannot always be trusted to be correct.

Used well, AI is a supplement that scales practice beyond what a teacher’s limited time can provide. Used poorly, it’s a sophisticated autocomplete that does the learner’s work for them.

Where AI adds the most value for language learners

Unlimited practice time

The bottleneck in language acquisition is time on task. AI removes time and availability as constraints — learners can practise at 11pm, for five minutes or five hours, on any topic they need.

Low-stakes environment

Many learners who freeze in class will attempt longer, more complex utterances with AI — because the stakes feel lower and there is no social cost to error.

On-demand specificity

A learner preparing for a job interview can practise exactly that scenario — with immediate feedback — rather than waiting for a generic coursebook unit on “talking about work.”

The Critical Distinction: Using AI vs Being Used By It

Productive AI UseCounterproductive AI Use
Practising a conversation scenario before a real interactionAsking AI to write the message/email for you
Asking AI to correct your writing and explain each correctionPasting AI-generated text into your own work unchanged
Using AI to explore how a grammar point works in contextAsking AI to “fix the grammar” without reading why
Roleplay with AI, then attempting the real conversationSubstituting AI for every real conversation

What Learners Can Actually Do With AI

A practical map of the ways AI genuinely helps language learners.

Core use cases for language learners

Conversation practice

Roleplay any scenario: job interviews, hotel check-ins, small talk at a party. Ask AI to play the other person and correct your English naturally.

“Let’s roleplay a conversation where I’m asking my landlord to fix a problem. Stay in character and correct my English naturally.”

Writing feedback

Submit a piece of writing and ask for feedback at a specific level: grammar only, register/tone, coherence and structure, or vocabulary range.

“Here’s my email. Correct any grammar errors and explain each one. Don’t rewrite it — I’ll do the rewriting.”

Vocabulary exploration

Ask how a word works in context: what collocates with it, how formal it is, what the difference between two near-synonyms is.

“What’s the difference between ‘deeply concerned’ and ‘very worried’? Give me three examples of each.”

Grammar in context

Ask AI to generate examples of a grammar point in a context you care about — not abstract textbook sentences.

“Show me 5 examples of the present perfect used in a sports news article. Then explain why it’s used in each one.”

Self-testing

Ask AI to quiz you on vocabulary, test your knowledge of a grammar point, or check whether you can explain a concept in English.

“Quiz me on the difference between ‘say’, ‘tell’, and ‘speak’. Give me 10 gap-fill sentences, then check my answers.”

Conversation Practice

How to use AI roleplay effectively — setting it up, getting meaningful feedback, and making the practice transfer to real interaction.

Setting Up a Roleplay

Weak prompt
Let’s practice English conversation.
Strong prompt
I’m a B2 learner preparing for a job interview for a marketing assistant position. Play the interviewer. Ask me typical interview questions one at a time. After each of my answers, stay in character but briefly note any significant English errors or unnatural phrasing.

The Debrief — Where the Learning Happens

Effective debrief prompts
Now let’s debrief. What were the three most important language points from that conversation that I should work on?
Look back at what I said. Which phrases sounded most unnatural? What would a native speaker say instead?
The debrief turns a conversation into a lesson. Without it, the practice is valuable but the harvest is low.

High-Value Roleplay Scenarios

Scenarios by context

Professional

Job interview / salary negotiation / presenting to a team / disagreeing politely in a meeting / giving and receiving feedback / handling a complaint

Daily life

Complaining to a landlord / returning a faulty item / doctor’s appointment / asking for directions / negotiating at a market

Academic

Seminar discussion / asking a lecturer a question / group project disagreement / explaining your research / academic email to a professor

Social

Small talk at a party / meeting your partner’s family / making plans / declining an invitation politely / expressing an opinion tactfully

Writing & Feedback

AI is at its most reliable when used for writing feedback. The key is designing the interaction so that the learner does the rewriting — not the AI.

The Golden Rule of AI Writing Feedback

Ask AI to diagnose. You do the surgery. When learners ask AI to “fix my writing,” they receive a corrected text that bypasses all the learning. When they ask AI to identify and explain problems — then rewrite themselves — the struggle is where acquisition happens.

What to ask AI to focus on — choose one level per session

Grammar & Accuracy

Find and explain grammatical errors only. Don’t change vocabulary or style.

“Find any grammar errors in my text. Don’t rewrite it. Explain each error in one sentence and tell me the rule.”

Register & Tone

Identify moments where the register is inconsistent or inappropriate for the audience.

“Is the register consistent throughout? Mark any phrases that don’t fit the formal register.”

Coherence & Structure

Is the argument logical? Do paragraphs connect? Are discourse markers used appropriately?

Vocabulary & Lexical Range

Identify overused words, missed collocation opportunities, and places where a more precise expression would improve the text.

“Identify the five weakest vocabulary choices. Suggest two alternatives for each.”

Feedback Protocol

  • Write first, AI second. The learner produces a complete draft independently.

  • Specify the feedback type. Choose one focus per feedback session.

  • Ask for diagnosis, not correction. “Tell me what’s wrong and why” — not “fix it.”

  • Revise independently. The learner rewrites without looking at the AI explanation again.

  • Harvest the language. Add 2–3 expressions from the AI feedback to your vocabulary system.

Prompt Engineering for Language Learning

The quality of AI as a learning tool depends almost entirely on the quality of the prompts used to interact with it.

The Core Principle

A vague prompt produces a generic, unhelpful response. A specific, well-structured prompt produces targeted, pedagogically useful output. Teaching learners to prompt effectively is teaching them to take control of their own learning.

The four elements of a good learning prompt

1. Role

Tell AI what role it should play. This shapes the register, vocabulary, and style.

“Act as a patient B2 English teacher.” / “Play a British receptionist.” / “You are an academic writing tutor.”

2. Task

State precisely what you want AI to do — not just the topic but the action.

“Explain, not just list.” / “Give feedback on X only.” / “Quiz me, don’t explain.” / “Roleplay — don’t break character.”

3. Level

Specify your proficiency level so AI calibrates vocabulary and complexity appropriately.

“I’m a B1 learner.” / “Use C1-level vocabulary.” / “Explain this as if to a complete beginner.”

4. Constraints

Tell AI what not to do. This is often more powerful than telling it what to do.

“Don’t rewrite for me.” / “Don’t break character.” / “Correct only grammar, not style.”

Ready-to-Use Prompt Templates

Conversation Roleplay
I’m a [LEVEL] learner. I want to practise [SPECIFIC SCENARIO]. You play [ROLE]. Start the conversation. After each of my messages, respond in character — then add one brief note in brackets about any significant language issue.
Writing Feedback
Here is a piece of writing I produced: [PASTE TEXT]. Please give me feedback on [grammar only / vocabulary range / register / structure]. For each issue, tell me: (1) what the problem is, (2) why it’s a problem, (3) one better alternative. Do NOT rewrite the whole text.
Vocabulary Exploration
I want to understand how [WORD/PHRASE] works in English. Please: (1) explain its register and typical contexts, (2) give 4 natural collocations, (3) show 3 example sentences in different contexts, (4) tell me one common mistake learners make.
Self-Testing
Quiz me on [VOCABULARY SET / GRAMMAR POINT]. Give me 10 questions one at a time. Don’t give me the answer until I’ve responded. After all 10, give me a score and explain any I got wrong.

The Teacher’s Role in AI-Mediated Learning

AI does not replace the teacher — it changes what teaching needs to do. The classroom becomes the place for what AI cannot do: authentic human interaction, cultural nuance, motivation, and the social dimension of language.

How the teacher’s role shifts

Designer

Teachers design AI tasks that produce learning — not just AI use. The task design is the teaching. The AI is the tool.

Curator & Critic

AI can be wrong, biased, or stylistically off. Teachers help learners develop critical literacy toward AI output.

Human model

Teachers model what AI cannot: authentic language use, hesitation and repair, emotional intelligence in communication.

What if learners use AI to do their writing assignments for them?

Design tasks that require personal experience or classroom content that AI cannot fabricate. Make the process visible by asking learners to submit drafts, AI feedback logs, and revisions rather than just a final product.

What if learners trust AI grammar explanations that are wrong?

Build critical AI literacy from the start. Show learners a concrete example where AI gives a confident but incorrect grammar explanation. Teach them the verification habit: check AI grammar rules against a reliable reference grammar.

Risks & Ethics

AI in language learning raises real concerns about accuracy, dependency, equity, and the nature of language itself.

Key risks to understand

Hallucination

AI generates confident, fluent text even when linguistically wrong. It can invent grammar rules and produce incorrect collocations — all with the same assured tone as correct information.

Mitigation: Treat AI as a first draft, not a final authority. Cross-check grammar rules.

Dependency

Learners who rely on AI for every language decision may not develop independent monitoring skills.

Mitigation: Design tasks where the learner produces first and AI evaluates second — never the reverse.

Register and variety bias

AI models are trained predominantly on written, formal, standard language — largely American or British English.

Mitigation: Supplement AI practice with authentic human interaction. Be explicit about AI’s built-in biases.

Academic integrity

The line between AI-assisted learning and AI-generated work submitted as the learner’s own is a live ethical question.

Mitigation: Be explicit with learners about what constitutes appropriate AI use in your context.

Research & Emerging Evidence on AI in Language Learning

Godwin-Jones (2022) — AI chatbots increased production quantity and reduced anxiety, but did not reliably improve accuracy without explicit feedback design.

Huang, Hwang & Chang (2022) — Meta-analysis found moderate positive effects on speaking and writing, with stronger effects when AI feedback was combined with teacher feedback.

Kohnke, Moorhouse & Zou (2023) — Without teacher guidance on how to prompt effectively, use tended toward lower-level tasks rather than productive practice.

Getting Started

A practical guide for teachers introducing AI tools into their learners’ practice — and for learners starting from scratch.

Tools Available (Free Tier)

ChatGPT (OpenAI)

Excellent for conversation roleplay, writing feedback, and grammar questions. Large user base means extensive community prompt libraries.

chat.openai.com

Claude (Anthropic)

Particularly strong at nuanced writing feedback, detailed explanations, and maintaining consistent personas in roleplay.

claude.ai

Gemini (Google)

Free with a Google account. Integrated with Google Docs for inline writing feedback.

gemini.google.com

Speak / Elsa

Dedicated language learning apps with AI pronunciation feedback. Better at spoken accuracy feedback than general AI tools.

speakapp.me / elsaspeak.com

A First-Week AI Practice Plan

Suggested sequence for introducing AI practice

Day 1 — Orientation

Open an AI tool. Try three different questions and evaluate the quality of its responses. Notice what it does well and what feels off.

Day 2 — Vocabulary

Choose one word you encountered recently. Use the vocabulary exploration template. Harvest 2–3 collocations into your vocabulary system.

Day 3 — Writing

Write a short email independently. Submit it to AI for grammar feedback only. Read the feedback, then revise yourself without looking at the AI’s comments again.

Day 4 — Conversation

Use the conversation roleplay template. Choose a scenario you’ll face in real life soon. Run the roleplay, then do a full debrief.

Day 5 — Reflection

Without AI, write 5 sentences about what you practised this week. Which AI sessions felt most useful? Bring your reflection to class.

Bibliography

Fryer & Carpenter (2006). Bots as language learning tools. Language Learning & Technology, 10(3).
Godwin-Jones (2022). Partnering with AI. Language Learning & Technology, 26(2).
Huang, Hwang & Chang (2022). AI-based tools in English language learning. Interactive Learning Environments.
Kohnke, Moorhouse & Zou (2023). ChatGPT for EFL/ESL instruction. RELC Journal, 54(2).
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