Author First name, Last name, Institution

Dana Saleh, Zayed University
Areej ElSayary, Zayed University

Document Type

Article

Source of Publication

Frontiers in Education

Publication Date

1-27-2026

Abstract

The rapid development of GenAI tools and their adoption in education have shown promising potential to personalize learning experiences. However, their effectiveness is influenced by factors such as familiarity, frequency of use, and the impact on self-learning. This study investigates the undergraduate students' familiarity with Generative AI (GenAI) tools, their frequency of use, and the perceived impact of GenAI on self-learning, with particular consideration of differences between students with and without learning difficulties. Prompt engineering is also included as a secondary aspect of students' GenAI experience. The research employed a quantitative survey design, utilizing validated scales to measure familiarity, usage experience, and perceived learning impact. Reliability and validity of the measurement model were established using Confirmatory Composite Analysis in SmartPLS. The study involved undergraduate students (N = 78) enrolled in GenEd courses, aged 17–21 (M = 18.5, SD = 0.86). Descriptive results showed that students reported low to moderate familiarity with GenAI tools, but they frequently engaged with them for academic purposes. Despite limited formal training, most participants rated the impact of GenAI on their self-learning positively, particularly in terms of communication skills, time efficiency, and confidence. A smaller portion of students indicated negative impacts, reflecting concerns about over-reliance and reduced critical engagement. Structural modeling further demonstrated significant positive relationships between GenAI familiarity, frequency of use, and perceived impact. These findings highlight a pattern of utility-driven adoption, in which students benefit from GenAI despite having a limited foundational understanding. The study highlights the importance of institutions strengthening AI literacy, providing structured pedagogical guidance, and integrating GenAI responsibly to support meaningful and ethical learning practices.

ISSN

2504-284X

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Volume

10

Disciplines

Computer Sciences | Education

Keywords

Generative AI (GenAI), higher education, learning difficulties, prompt engineering, self-learning

Scopus ID

105029830244

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Indexed in Scopus

yes

Open Access

yes

Open Access Type

Gold: This publication is openly available in an open access journal/series

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