What Is This Tool?
Most students know AI can help with schoolwork, but stare at the input box unsure what to actually type — a vague question gets a vague answer. A prompt is the skill of "how to ask": turning a fuzzy need into a specific instruction the AI can act on precisely. Same AI, different phrasing, wildly different quality of help.
This page isn't a how-to article — it's a usable library: browse by category, copy with one click, swap in your own details. Everything here runs and copies locally in your browser; nothing is sent to any AI on our end. What you paste it into, and what that tool does with it, is entirely up to you.
Why Use It?
- Six categories built around real student needs — essays, mistake analysis, translation & grammar, review, everyday writing — not a vague "how to use AI" list.
- Every prompt has bracketed placeholders telling you exactly what to fill in, so you don't have to guess how to phrase your need.
- One-click copy — no retyping, paste straight into whatever AI tool you already have open.
- Free, no login, no AI API calls from this site — your conversation stays strictly between you and the AI tool you choose.
- Category filters so you jump straight to what you need instead of scrolling.
How to Use
- Click a category button above to filter to what you need (e.g. "Essay Writing").
- Find the prompt that matches your situation and click "Copy".
- Open the AI tool you use (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, etc.) and paste.
- Replace the bracketed parts with your actual details (e.g. swap [topic] for your real topic) before sending.
Example
Input
Write a narrative essay about "[topic]", around [500] words…Output
Write a narrative essay about "my summer vacation", around 500 words, suitable for middle school level. Include specific details and genuine voice — don't make it sound like AI wrote it.Swapping the brackets for real specifics turns a template into a ready instruction.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does this tool generate the AI's answer for me?
No. This page only provides the prompt text — it doesn't call any AI API. After copying a prompt, you paste it into ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini or whichever AI tool you use, and that tool generates the response.
Why are there so many brackets in the prompts?
Brackets mark the parts you fill in yourself — the topic, word count, grade level. That's what makes the prompt specific to your situation instead of a vague template. The more specific you fill it in, the more accurate the AI's help will be.
Is turning in AI-written work considered cheating?
Depends on your school's policy and how you use it. These prompts work best for understanding a concept, catching sentence errors, getting revision suggestions, or generating practice problems — not for generating a finished assignment to submit unchanged. Treating the output as a draft or reference, then rewriting it in your own words, is the version that actually helps you learn.
What age group are these prompts for?
The prompts are written generally, and many include placeholders like "[middle school/high school]" you can swap for your own level — the AI will adjust its difficulty and wording accordingly.
Is my conversation logged anywhere?
Not by us. Copying and filtering prompts happens entirely in your browser. Whatever AI tool you paste into governs your conversation from there — check that tool's own privacy policy.