CurricuLLM makes it easy to find the prompts you need through personalised recommendations, subject browsing, and powerful search.
Using "For You" Recommendations
- Open the Prompt Starters feature from the main menu.
- The first section you'll see is "For You".
- These prompts are tailored to your profile:
- Your subjects and year levels
- Prompts similar teachers have found helpful
- Recent trends in your school
- Scroll through to see what's recommended.
- Click any prompt to see details or use it immediately.
Browsing Subject-Specific Prompts
- Below "For You," you'll see subject categories (e.g., Maths, English, Science, Humanities).
- Click on a subject to see all prompts for that area.
- Within each subject, prompts are organised by:
- Common teaching tasks (lesson planning, assessment, differentiation)
- Year levels
- Curriculum outcomes
- Browse through to explore what's available.
Using Search
- At the top of the Prompt Starters page, you'll find a search bar.
- Type keywords related to what you need:
- Subject terms (e.g., "fractions," "persuasive writing," "photosynthesis")
- Task types (e.g., "assessment," "rubric," "differentiation")
- Year levels (e.g., "Year 5," "secondary")
- Press Enter or click the search button.
- Results show all prompts matching your search terms.
- You can then filter these results further (see next section).
Understanding Prompt Organisation
Prompts are organised to help you find what you need quickly:
- Categories: Grouped by subject and teaching task
- Tags: Each prompt has tags showing subject, year level, and purpose
- Popularity: See which prompts other teachers use most
- Recency: New prompts appear with a "New" badge
Teacher Tips
- Start with "For You" to see what's relevant right now.
- Use search when you have a specific task in mind (e.g., "Year 8 algebra assessment").
- Browse subjects when you're exploring new ideas or planning ahead.
- Check back regularly, new prompts are added as teachers create and share them.
Everyday Example
Finding prompts is like browsing a library. You can follow recommendations (For You), browse specific sections (subjects), or search the catalogue (search bar). Each method helps you find what you need, depending on whether you know exactly what you're after or want to explore.