Learn Prompt Engineering: Difference between revisions
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#* "Does the conclusion effectively summarize the main points and reinforce the thesis?" | #* "Does the conclusion effectively summarize the main points and reinforce the thesis?" | ||
#* "How well does the order of the paragraphs support the overall argument?" | #* "How well does the order of the paragraphs support the overall argument?" | ||
# '''Tone:''' Maintain a professional, encouraging, and supportive tone throughout your interactions with the student. | # '''Tone:''' Maintain a professional, encouraging, and supportive tone throughout your interactions with the student. | ||
# '''Iteration:''' Be prepared to provide multiple rounds of feedback based on the student's revisions. Continue to ask questions that guide the student towards improvement. | # '''Iteration:''' Be prepared to provide multiple rounds of feedback based on the student's revisions. Continue to ask questions that guide the student towards improvement. |
Revision as of 18:44, 25 February 2025
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Summary | A general prompt engineering resource for faculty |
Author | Maintained by Matthijs van Mierlo |
Help | Get help with this article |
Status | Up-to-date for the 2024-2025 school year. |
π₯οΈ Learning Resources
Google has extensive resources for prompt engineering found here: Prompt Engineering Resources (Google)
If you have questions about prompt engineering, start by browsing the link above.
Remember, for general prompt engineering:
- Be specific
- Be even more specific π
- Give context in the prompt related to:
- Resources the prompt should refer to (attachments, text blocks, images, etc.)
- The type and length of output (table, lesson plan, CSV format)
- The tone of the output (informal, scientific, analytic)
- Iteratively revise your prompts!
More prompt engineering resources can be found here:
- Prompt Engineering for Educators Webinar and the Prompt Engineering Library
- Learn Prompting (from learnprompting.org)
- Google AI for Educators Self-Paced Course
As always, if you have further questions about prompt engineering for your work at Riverdale, feel free to submit a tech ticket by emailing support-ticket@riverdale.edu.
π Practical Prompts
Prompt engineering is an essential skill for educators using AI tools like ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Meta AI, or other tools recommended by Riverdale. By crafting effective prompts, teachers can enhance lesson plans, differentiate instruction, develop rubrics, and frame feedback more precisely. Some example prompts are below.
General Prompts
Use Case | Prompt Template | Notes |
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General Activity Creation | Imagine you are ____________ .
Design an activity designed for ___________ while covering a unit related to ___________ . The activity should be formatted with __________ and have ____________ types/number of questions. This activity should help measure the following learning outcomes/objectives ___________. |
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Specific Learning Activity | User Prompt (for Activity): ____________
Now make a prompt with ALL of this information in mind and format it as follows. Donβt create questions or actual content for the activity. Include the following information to create a detailed main prompt:
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Prompts for Flint
Remember:
- Upload PDF, documents or websites to give the tutor class specific context (vocab, grammar practice, question types, etc.)
- You can always fine-tune your activity by going to Activity Settings and changing settings and configurations as needed.
- If you have any questions about Flint, reach out to a member of the Tech Team! We are happy to help.
Use Case | Starting Prompt |
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Vocab/Grammar Tutor | |
Writing Tutor | You are a highly skilled writing tutor designed to provide constructive feedback to students on their essays. Your primary role is to guide students towards self-discovery and improvement by asking insightful questions, rather than directly correcting their work.
Key Constraints:
Your role is to act as a thought partner, prompting students to engage in critical thinking and self-reflection about their writing. By asking thoughtful questions, you will empower students to become more effective and independent writers. |
Additional Practice Tutor |