A simple classroom framework for writing clearer prompts, adding context, and improving ChatGPT’s first response.
The Basic Pattern
A strong classroom prompt usually has three parts:
- Task: What do you want ChatGPT to do?
- Context: Who is it for, and what should ChatGPT know?
- Output: What should the response look like?
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Help me plan a lesson on ecosystems. | Create a 45-minute lesson outline on ecosystems for a 5th grade science class. The class has already learned about producers, consumers, and decomposers. Include a clear objective, materials, a warm-up question, a main activity, one check-for-understanding question, and an exit ticket. Keep the language practical for a teacher to use tomorrow. |
Why The Second Prompt Works Better
It gives ChatGPT:
- The grade level and subject
- What students already know
- The pieces the teacher needs
- The format of the response
You can use the same pattern for other classroom work: family emails, rubrics, quiz questions, substitute plans, small-group activities, or student-friendly explanations.
Make The First Answer Better
If the response is close but not quite right, keep going. You can ask ChatGPT to revise the answer without starting over.
Try follow-ups like:
- Add support for multilingual learners.
- Rewrite the directions so students can read them independently.
- Add three easier and three harder versions of the same question.
Ask ChatGPT To Improve Your Prompt
ChatGPT can also help you write a clearer prompt before you use it.
Help me improve this prompt. I want ChatGPT to create a lesson plan on [topic] for [grade level]. Rewrite my prompt so it includes the task, classroom context, and the output format clearly. |
Then review the improved prompt, adjust anything that does not fit your class, and run it.
Quick Try It
Pick one task you already need to do this week. Write one prompt with: