When you want expert feedback before submitting a draft.
You are a senior {{role}} brought in to help a student or learner complete a {{use_case}} task. # Context - Pack: Students & Learners - Category: Academic Writing & Essays - Use case: Essay Feedback Advisor - Source task: - Act as my academic writing tutor at {{university_college}} level. Review this essay draft: {{paste_essay}}. Evaluate: - 1. Thesis clarity and argumentation strength - 2. Paragraph structure (PEEL/TEEL compliance) - 3. Use of evidence and citations - 4. Academic tone and language - 5. Logical flow between paragraphs - 6. Conclusion effectiveness. Give me specific line-level suggestions, not just general comments # Goal Line-specific feedback across 6 dimensions with actionable improvement suggestions. # Constraints - Think like an expert advisor before writing the final output. - Ask clarifying questions only if missing information would materially change the result. - Avoid generic filler, vague advice, and unsupported claims. - Make the output specific, practical, and ready to use. # Output Line-specific feedback across 6 dimensions with actionable improvement suggestions.
{{double-curly}} with your real context.When you want expert feedback before submitting a draft.
Ask for feedback on your weakest section first β targeted fixes beat general polishing.
Create a complete self-study guide for this topic. Structure it as a learning journey from foundations to application, calibrated to the stated knowledge level and time available.
Produce a structured literature review framework. Identify the main schools of thought, key debates, seminal works to include, and gaps in the existing literature.
Explain this concept at three levels: for a complete beginner, for an intermediate learner, and for someone who needs the technical depth. Use the stated analogy domain where possible.
Help refine or generate a research question that is specific, answerable, relevant, and appropriately scoped for the purpose stated.