Misconception Acquisition Dynamics in Large Language Models
This work addresses the challenge of building effective educational AI systems by providing insights into misconception modeling, though it is incremental as it builds on existing instruction-tuning methods.
The study tackled the problem of training large language models to acquire student misconceptions without degrading their reasoning abilities, finding that models overapply single misconceptions unless trained with correct examples, and that intermediate reasoning steps are crucial for learning errors, with the tutor model successfully learning multiple misconceptions without accuracy loss.
Effective educational AI depends on modeling student misconceptions. Such models enable realistic learner simulation and diagnostic, adaptive tutoring. However, instruction-tuning large language models on student responses containing misconception errors can degrade reasoning abilities, creating a tension between faithful misconception modeling and preserving correct reasoning in other contexts. To support both learner simulation and tutoring, we study two misconception-aware models: the Novice Student Misconception Model, trained to acquire a single misconception for simulating an individual student, and the Expert Tutor Misconception Model, trained on multiple misconceptions to capture the error patterns a tutor encounters across students. To study the misconception acquisition dynamics of both models, we develop MalAlgoLib, a library that generates algebra problems with correct solution traces and misconception-specific erroneous traces. Our experiments across three LLMs reveal that the student and the tutor model exhibit fundamentally different misconception acquisition dynamics. For the student model, a single misconception is not learned as a context-specific behavior. Models overapply it across problems, degrading correct-solving accuracy unless training includes correct examples to enforce boundaries. In contrast, the tutor model can learn multiple misconceptions jointly without sacrificing correct-solving accuracy. Critically, intermediate reasoning steps are the bottleneck. With final-answer supervision alone, models cannot learn where error enters the solution, so neither the student model nor the tutor model acquires misconceptions regardless of data size. Together, these results, enabled by MalAlgoLib, provide an interpretable account of misconception acquisition under instruction tuning and guidance for training misconception-aware LLMs while preserving correct reasoning.