Welcome to the ultimate library of AI education hacks for parents. Here you will find tools for ADHD support, homework grading, and creative storytelling. These are tools for parents to use with ChatGPT/Gemini.

“Grade this practice paper. Give marks, correct answers, and explain why each answer is right or wrong. Highlight weak areas, give improvement tips, and show overall score out of 100.”

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“Rewrite this answer using top-scoring exam techniques. Follow marking scheme keywords, add clear structure, and make it a model answer that gets full marks.”

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“Explain where the student went wrong in this answer. Give step-by-step reasoning, corrected version, and a simple explanation the child can remember next time.”

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“Solve this math problem step-by-step. Show every stage clearly, explain each step, and include a simple version for kids to understand.”

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“I am a parent who speaks English. My child has this homework assignment in [Language, e.g., Arabic]: [Paste Text or Upload Image]. Translate the instructions clearly into English, explain the goal of the assignment, and draft a sample response structure I can show my child.”

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“Create a practice exam paper for a [Year/Grade] student on the topic of [Topic, e.g., The Water Cycle]. Include: 5 Short Answer questions (Easy), 2 Essay/Long Answer questions (Hard), and a separate ‘Answer Key’ at the bottom with marking criteria.”

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“Act as a Quiz Master. I want to test my knowledge on [Topic]. Ask me one multiple-choice question at a time. Wait for my answer. If I am wrong, give me a subtle hint. If I am right, explain why it is correct briefly, then move to the next question.”

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“I am attaching my revision notes as images. Convert these notes into a table of 10 key Flashcards. Column 1: The Concept/Keyword. Column 2: The Definition (under 2 sentences). Column 3: A funny memory hook/rhyme to help me remember it.”

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“Let’s practice math problems for a [Year/Grade] student. Start with an EASY problem about [Topic]. If I get it right, make the next question slightly harder. If I get it wrong, make the next question easier and explain the step I missed.”

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“Explain the concept of [Topic, e.g., Photosynthesis] to a [Age] year old. Use a creative analogy involving [Child’s Interest, e.g., Minecraft or Baking] to make it easy to understand.”

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“I am pasting the assignment sheet for my child’s project. Analyze it and create a simple ‘A-Grade Checklist.’ Bullet point exactly what the teacher is looking for (e.g., ‘Must include 3 sources’) so we can check the work before submitting.”

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“Act as a confused student who knows nothing about [Topic]. Ask me (the student) questions about it. I have to explain it to you simply. If I use a complicated word, ask me ‘What does that mean?’ Keep asking until I have explained the concept in simple terms.”

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“Generate a 10-question quiz on [Topic] that should take exactly 15 minutes to complete. Include a timer guidance for each question.”

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“I have a drawing of [Describe Drawing, e.g., a robot eating pizza] made by my child. Write a highly detailed ‘Image Prompt’ describing this scene that I can paste into an AI Video Generator (like Runway or Pika) to make it look like a Pixar movie scene.”

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“I have a drawing of [Describe Drawing, e.g., a robot eating pizza] made by my child. Write a highly detailed ‘Image Prompt’ describing this scene that I can paste into an AI Video Generator (like Runway or Pika) to make it look like a Pixar movie scene.”

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“Write a 5-minute bedtime story featuring a main character named [Child’s Name] and their favorite toy [Toy Name]. The plot should involve [Theme, e.g., going to Mars] and teach a gentle lesson about sharing.”

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“Act as [Character Name, e.g., Sonic]. Write a short, encouraging message to my 4-year-old fan named [Name]. Tell them that Sonic runs fast because he eats his broccoli and listens to his parents.”

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“(Use in DALL-E 3): A simple, clear black and white line art coloring page for children. The image should feature [Idea, e.g., a Dinosaur riding a skateboard]. No shading, white background.”

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“I have a bored [Age] year old. We have the following items: [List Items, e.g., Cardboard box, foil, glue]. Suggest 3 creative craft projects we can build together using only these materials.”

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“My child has ADHD and is overwhelmed by this assignment: [Paste Assignment]. Break this task down into a checklist of 10 micro-steps that each take less than 15 minutes. Suggest a small ‘dopamine reward’ after every 3 steps.”

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“Create a structured morning routine list for an autistic child who loves [Interest, e.g., Trains]. Use clear, literal, and positive language. Break the routine from ‘Waking Up’ to ‘Leaving for School’ into numbered ‘Stations’ or steps.”

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“My child keeps misspelling these words: [List Words]. Create a funny mnemonic phrase, rhyme, or memory hook for each word to help them remember the correct letter order.”

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“My child struggles with [Situation, e.g., asking to join a game at recess]. Write a simple script or roleplay scenario we can practice at home to give them confidence.”

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“I am homeschooling a [Age] year old. We need to cover [Subject, e.g., Ancient History]. My child loves [Interest, e.g., LEGO]. Design a 3-day lesson plan that teaches this history topic primarily through building projects.”

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“I need to teach my [Age] year old how to [Skill, e.g., Tie Shoelaces]. Break this physical skill down into 5 tiny, distinct steps. Use simple analogies (like ‘bunny ears’) to explain the hand movements.”

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“I need to teach my [Age] year old how to [Skill, e.g., Tie Shoelaces]. Break this physical skill down into 5 tiny, distinct steps. Use simple analogies (like ‘bunny ears’) to explain the hand movements.”

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“My child wants to learn [Skill, e.g., Coding/Python]. Create a ‘Week 1 Starter Plan’ for a complete beginner. Include a list of free tools needed and 3 simple ‘quick win’ projects they can finish in the first week.”

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“Act as a friendly shopkeeper in [Country]. I am a beginner in [Language]. Let’s roleplay a scenario where I try to buy ingredients for dinner. Correct my grammar gently before continuing the story.”

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“My child is deeply interested in [Interest 1] and [Interest 2]. Suggest 5 modern, in-demand careers (focus on future tech) that combine these interests. Explain simply what they actually do all day.”

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“My [Age] year old wants to be a [Job, e.g., Game Designer]. Reverse engineer this path. What soft skills should they practice now? What free tools can they start playing with today to get a head start?”

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“My child loves [Topic]. Create a ‘5-Minute Daily Learning Plan’ for the next 7 days. Each day must take only 5 minutes. Include a fun fact or quick video search term.”

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“I want my child to practice critical thinking. Act as a debate opponent. The topic is: ‘Is space exploration worth the money?’ You take the stance ‘No’. My child will take the stance ‘Yes’. Present your first argument.”

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“Pick a chore (e.g., ‘Cleaning their room’) for a [Age] year old. Turn it into a ‘Mission’ or Game with a specific goal, a time limit, and a ‘Mission Complete’ badge.”

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“My child struggles with [Issue, e.g., Interrupting adults]. Write a funny, short fable about a [Animal] who had this same problem, what happened, and how they learned to fix it.”

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“Explain the concept of [Topic, e.g., Never sharing passwords] to a [Age] year old. Use a ‘Super Hero’ or ‘Castle Defense’ metaphor to explain why we keep things private, without using scary language.”

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“My child is feeling [Emotion, e.g., Jealousy]. Give me a script of what to say to validate their feeling first, and then help them move through it constructively.”

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“My child is bored in [Subject] because it is too easy. Create a ‘Passion Project’ challenge that takes the current topic [Topic] and applies it to a real-world problem they have to solve.”

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