Teachers, Trainers, Online facilitators
Prepare the Required Inputs listed in the Workflow Prompt. Use as much detail as necessary.
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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You are an experienced educator. Your task is to design a lesson optimised for virtual delivery where attention, clarity, and interaction must be intentionally managed.
### Required Input
- Topic
- Learner Level / Audience
- Learning Goal
- Duration
- Class Size
- Delivery Format
- Assessment Type
### Input Validation
Ensure delivery is virtual and constraints are clear (e.g. tools, time). Ask for clarification if missing.
### Instructions
Break the session into short, clearly defined segments (5–10 minutes max) to prevent attention drop-off.
Design interaction into each segment. Use chat prompts, polls, quick responses, or breakout discussions to maintain engagement.
Write instructions explicitly. In online settings, ambiguity causes delays—ensure every task includes what to do, how long, and expected output.
Plan energy shifts. Alternate between listening, doing, and discussing to avoid fatigue.
Prepare fallback options for technical issues (e.g. if breakout rooms fail, switch to chat-based discussion).
Define how you will check understanding quickly and frequently without formal testing.
End with a clear consolidation to anchor learning.
### Output
Segmented Lesson Flow
- Time-stamped segments with purpose
Interactive Elements
- Exact prompts, poll questions, or tasks
Facilitator Script Notes
- Key instructions and transitions phrased clearly
Engagement Strategy
- How participation is maintained throughout
Contingency Plan
- Backup methods for each activity
Assessment Method
- How understanding is checked during the session
Optimise for low-bandwidth or audio-only delivery.
Topic: Giving and receiving feedback effectively
Audience: New managers, 6-18 months in role
Duration: 60 minutes | Class size: 16 learners | Format: Virtual (Zoom) | Assessment: Live application + written reflection
Learning goal: Learners will be able to deliver one piece of constructive feedback using a structured framework, and identify what makes feedback land well vs. poorly.
Facilitator welcomes group, confirms audio/video, and sets the session norm: cameras on, chat active throughout. A single slide is visible: the central question for the session.
Poll launches immediately. Results are shown and briefly narrated – no long debrief yet.
Facilitator delivers a focused 8-minute input using two real-scenario examples (one feedback conversation that went wrong, one that worked). Learners are told to type one word in chat when the bad example is read: how the receiver likely felt.
The SBI framework (Situation, Behaviour, Impact) is introduced with a visual. Learners are given 3 minutes to rewrite the bad example from the input segment using SBI structure – typed directly into the chat or a shared doc.
Pairs in breakout rooms. One person delivers a prepared feedback scenario using SBI. The other responds as the employee, then gives 60 seconds of observer feedback. Roles swap. Each pair has a task card visible in the shared doc.
Two volunteers share what felt natural and what felt forced. Facilitator draws out patterns using chat responses: “Type G if it felt genuine, S if it felt scripted.”
Each learner writes one real feedback message they need to deliver in the next two weeks, using SBI. Typed into a private reflection doc or chat to facilitator only.
Facilitator reads two anonymised examples from the consolidation task (with permission), names what worked, and restates the core principle. Exit poll launches.
“Before we get into content, one quick norm: I’ll be using chat a lot today – it’s not side conversation, it’s part of how we learn together. Please keep it open.”
“I’m opening breakout rooms now – you’ll be in pairs. The task card is in the shared doc, page 2. Person A delivers first. You have exactly 12 minutes – I’ll send a 2-minute warning to the rooms. If you finish early, discuss: what felt hardest about delivering it?”
“Welcome back. Before anyone speaks – type G, S, or B in chat right now based on how it felt to deliver that feedback.” [Pause 15 seconds.] “Let’s look at what we’ve got…”
“You’ve each written one real message today. That’s the work. The framework only helps if you actually use it – so the ask is simple: send that message before next Friday.”
Understanding is checked three times during the session without formal testing:
[…]
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