Microlearning Lesson Plan (15–30 mins)

Create a short, focused lesson designed for quick learning sessions.
Education - Lesson Planning - Microlearning Lesson Plan (15–30 mins)

Who it's for

Trainers, Teachers, L&D teams

Get Ready

Prepare the Required Inputs listed in the Workflow Prompt. Use as much detail as necessary.

How to use this prompt

1. Copy the Workflow Prompt.
2. Paste it into your AI tool.
3. Replace the "Required Inputs"
4. Run the prompt.

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Workflow Prompt

				
					You are an experienced educator. Your task is to design a high-impact microlearning session (15–30 minutes) that delivers one clear outcome.

### Required Input
- Topic
- Learner Level / Audience
- Learning Goal
- Duration
- Class Size
- Delivery Format
- Assessment Type

### Input Validation
Ensure the topic is narrow and achievable within the duration. Ask for refinement if too broad.

### Instructions
Identify the single most important concept or skill learners must leave with. Remove all non-essential content.

Design a tight structure: rapid context setting, focused explanation, immediate application, and quick reinforcement.

Use one core activity that directly reinforces the learning goal. Avoid multiple competing tasks.

Ensure instructions are concise and easy to follow without explanation overhead.

Build a fast feedback loop—learners should know quickly if they understood correctly.

End with a clear takeaway statement that learners can recall easily.

### Output
Lesson Snapshot
- Core concept and objective

Session Flow
- Minute-by-minute breakdown

Core Activity
- Instructions and expected output

Quick Practice Task
- Reinforcement activity

Facilitator Notes
- Key emphasis points

Assessment Method
- Fast validation of understanding
				
			

Optional advanced instructions

				
					Make the session mobile-first and self-paced.
				
			

Example output



Microlearning Session

Lesson snapshot

Topic: Writing a subject line that gets opened

Audience: Junior marketing coordinators, 0-12 months in role

Duration: 20 minutes | Class size: 10 learners | Format: In-person | Assessment: Live peer rating

Core concept: A strong email subject line does one thing – it makes the reader feel something is relevant to them right now. Every other consideration is secondary.

Objective: Learners will rewrite a weak subject line into one that is specific, timely, and reader-focused – and be able to explain why it works.

Session flow

0:00 – 0:03 | Hook

Facilitator displays five real subject lines on screen – two high-performing, three that flopped. No labels. Learners vote by raising hands: “Which ones did you open?” Results are revealed with open rates. No explanation yet.

0:03 – 0:08 | Core concept

Facilitator delivers a focused 5-minute explanation built around one question: “What makes this feel relevant to me, right now?” Three principles are introduced – specificity, urgency, and reader self-interest – each illustrated with one before/after pair.

  • Vague: “Check out our latest update” ? Specific: “Your account renewal is in 3 days”
  • Generic: “Tips for better emails” ? Self-interest: “Why your last campaign got a 12% open rate”
  • Flat: “New feature available” ? Urgent: “The feature you requested is live – here’s how to use it”

0:08 – 0:18 | Core activity

Each learner receives a card with one weak subject line. They have 6 minutes to rewrite it using all three principles, then write one sentence explaining their choice. Cards are passed to the person on their left for a 2-minute peer rating.

0:18 – 0:20 | Close

Facilitator reads two rewrites aloud, names what worked, and delivers the takeaway statement. Session ends.

Core activity

Instructions: You have 6 minutes. Read the subject line on your card. Rewrite it so it is specific, timely, and focused on what the reader gets – not what you want them to do. Then write one sentence: “This works because…”

Sample weak subject lines on cards:

  • “Newsletter – October edition”
  • “We have something exciting to share”
  • “Don’t miss out”
  • “A message from our team”
  • “Important update inside”

Expected output: One rewritten subject line (under 50 characters) and one written explanation sentence per learner.

Quick practice task

After peer rating, facilitator displays one final subject line on screen – unseen by all learners. Everyone rewrites it simultaneously in 60 seconds on a sticky note or scrap paper. Facilitator picks three at random and reads them aloud. Group identifies which best applies all three principles and why.

Facilitator notes

  • The hook works only if you do not explain the open rates before the vote – sequence matters
  • During the core concept, keep each before/after pair visible on screen while you explain it – do not advance the slide until you move to the next principle
  • In the peer rating step, tell learners to mark only whether all three principles are present – not whether they personally like the line
  • If a rewrite is too long, ask: “What one word could you cut without losing meaning?”
  • The takeaway statement should be spoken, not read from a slide: “A subject line works when the reader sees themselves in it.”

Assessment method

Understanding is validated in two passes:

  • Peer rating (0:14): The learner on the left checks the rewrite against the three principles – all three present, two present, or one or fewer. Facilitator scans cards and addresses any rewrite rated one or fewer immediately.
  • 60-second sprint (0:18): The group’s ability to correctly identify the strongest rewrite – and explain why – tells the facilitator whether the principles transferred from a single scenario to a new one.

[…]

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