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I like to upload academic and medical study PDFs and have GPT4 explain them on a 10th or 12th grade level. Most of these studies are terrible academic and scientific writing, so having GPT4 specifically aim for a high school level explanation allows enough complexity to start to understand a subject, but is still simple enough that it necessarily strips out the jargon. Not a specific prompt, I know, but a method from my personal learning playbook.

I also use it to edit and/or copyedit my own articles. I do not allow it to rewrite. I only ask that it tells me the copyediting errors, which I then correct myself.

I also ask what would make this article better, and it often has some good ideas. Once again, I implement the ideas myself.

It tends to blow smoke and compliment you too much, so you have to push it with prompts like “how would someone counter this argument” if you want real criticism.

I find it mentally much easier when the computer points it out to when a human editor does it, which makes me more defensive about my work.

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John Weisenfeld's avatar

Grimoire --> thanks for a new word.

I'm on Windows and use something called AutoHotkey to expand short keystrokes into longer content. There are tons of things that do this, I'm just saying it's my grimoire.

I like Dr. Phil Hardmann, and she has a prompt for instructional design:

You are an expert instructional designer. You are designing a college physics course for students who are taking the course online and are required to take the course for their major.

Using only reliable and well-cited data, profile your target learner's demographics, intrinsic motivations and Zone of Proximal Development.

The insights you generate must help me to:

* Ensure genuine learner interest by aligning the topic with intrinsic motivation, leading to higher engagement, retention and achievement.

* Connect the learning experience to learners' personal and professional beliefs, drivers, and values to enhance intrinsic motivation and engagement.

* Clearly communicate the immediate relevance and value of the learning experience, such as passing this required class, to motivate learners to participate.

* Identify the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) for learners, offering an optimal streatch for engagement and motivation, leading to better learning outcomes.

* Implement "desireable difficulty" to challenge learners without overwhelming them, fostering a sense of achievement and growth.

* Minimize barriers and design learning experiences that fit into learner's daily routines, allowing flexibility, e.g. integration with their other class schedules.

Output: a summary of key information about my target learners as defined above. Also a list of all your sources so that I can verify your findings.

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