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Findings of the BEA 2025 Shared Task on Pedagogical Ability Assessment of AI-powered Tutors

Workshop on Innovative Use of NLP for Building Educational Applications (UNBEA), 2025
11 July 2025
Ekaterina Kochmar
Kaushal Kumar Maurya
Kseniia Petukhova
KV Aditya Srivatsa
Anaïs Tack
Justin Vasselli
ArXiv (abs)PDFHTML
Main:9 Pages
2 Figures
Bibliography:4 Pages
31 Tables
Appendix:10 Pages
Abstract

This shared task has aimed to assess pedagogical abilities of AI tutors powered by large language models (LLMs), focusing on evaluating the quality of tutor responses aimed at student's mistake remediation within educational dialogues. The task consisted of five tracks designed to automatically evaluate the AI tutor's performance across key dimensions of mistake identification, precise location of the mistake, providing guidance, and feedback actionability, grounded in learning science principles that define good and effective tutor responses, as well as the track focusing on detection of the tutor identity. The task attracted over 50 international teams across all tracks. The submitted models were evaluated against gold-standard human annotations, and the results, while promising, show that there is still significant room for improvement in this domain: the best results for the four pedagogical ability assessment tracks range between macro F1 scores of 58.34 (for providing guidance) and 71.81 (for mistake identification) on three-class problems, with the best F1 score in the tutor identification track reaching 96.98 on a 9-class task. In this paper, we overview the main findings of the shared task, discuss the approaches taken by the teams, and analyze their performance. All resources associated with this task are made publicly available to support future research in this critical domain.

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