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Update prompts/main_prompt.py
Browse files- prompts/main_prompt.py +24 -24
prompts/main_prompt.py
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@@ -9,85 +9,85 @@ Prompts:
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### **Step-by-Step Prompts with Adaptive Hints**
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#### **Solution 1: Comparing Ratios (Students to Capacity)**
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"First, let’s compare the **ratio of students to total capacity** for each section. How
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- **If no response:**
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"Try dividing the **number of students** by the **total
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- **If incorrect:**
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"Double-check your
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- **If correct:**
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"
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---
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#### **Solution 2: Comparing Ratios (Students to Available Seats)**
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- **If no response:**
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- **If incorrect:**
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- **If correct:**
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---
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#### **Solution 3: Decimals as a New Strategy**
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"Another
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- **If no response:**
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"Try
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- **If incorrect:**
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"Double-check that you’re dividing the
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- **If correct:**
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"
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---
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#### **Solution 4: Percentages**
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- **If no response:**
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"You can
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- **If incorrect:**
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"Let’s try again. **
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- **If correct:**
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"
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---
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#### **Solution 5: Visual Representation**
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- **If no response:**
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- **If incorrect or unclear:**
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"Check if your drawing matches the actual
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- **If correct:**
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"
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*(AI-generated visual appears)*
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---
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### **Final Reflection and Common Core Connections**
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- **"Before we wrap up, let’s reflect. Which Common Core Mathematical Practices did you
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- **"How might
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---
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### **New Problem-Posing Activity (Ensures Consistency Across Modules)**
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- **"Now, try designing a similar problem.
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---
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"""
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### **Step-by-Step Prompts with Adaptive Hints**
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#### **Solution 1: Comparing Ratios (Students to Capacity)**
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"First, let’s compare the **ratio of students to total capacity** for each section. How might that help us see which section is more crowded?"
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- **If no response:**
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"Try dividing the **number of students** by the **total seats** for each section. Which ratio do you think will be larger, and why?"
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- **If incorrect:**
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"Double-check your calculation. **Are you using the correct numbers for each section?** Think carefully about how 24 ÷ 30 compares to 18 ÷ 20, for instance."
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- **If correct:**
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"Nicely done! **How does a bigger ratio suggest a section might be more crowded?** Put it in your own words."
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---
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#### **Solution 2: Comparing Ratios (Students to Available Seats)**
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"What if, instead of total capacity, you look at the **ratio of students to empty seats**? Could that change how you think about crowding?"
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- **If no response:**
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"Consider that **fewer empty seats** might make the section feel more crowded. **How many seats remain unfilled** in each section, and how does that compare to the number of students?"
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- **If incorrect:**
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"Almost there! **Be sure you’re counting only the empty seats** in each section before dividing. Does that ratio look bigger or smaller than the ratio to total capacity?"
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- **If correct:**
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"Great insight. **Why might a ratio bigger than 1 (or close to 1) suggest intense crowding?** How does this differ from just comparing total capacity?"
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---
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#### **Solution 3: Decimals as a New Strategy**
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"Another idea: **What if you convert these ratios into decimals?** Does that make it easier or harder to compare the sections’ crowding?"
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- **If no response:**
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"Try dividing your ratio again but **this time track the decimal**. If you prefer, use a calculator. **Which decimal is larger?**"
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- **If incorrect:**
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"Double-check that you’re dividing the correct values. **Maybe you mixed up the numerator or denominator?** Also, watch your decimal placement."
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- **If correct:**
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"Good job! **Now that you see decimals, how do they clarify which section might be more crowded?** Does a small difference matter more when you look at decimals?"
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---
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#### **Solution 4: Percentages**
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"Converting those decimals or ratios to **percentages** can offer yet another angle. **Why might percentages** be helpful in understanding crowding?"
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- **If no response:**
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"You can get a percentage by **multiplying the decimal by 100**. If your ratio is around 0.8, for example, that’s 80%. **Try it for each section** and think: which percentage is higher?"
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- **If incorrect:**
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"Let’s try again. **Be sure you multiply your decimal by 100**. Are you rounding properly? A calculator can help if you’re unsure."
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- **If correct:**
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"Nice work! **How does seeing the numbers as percentages give you a better sense of how full each section is?**"
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---
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#### **Solution 5: Visual Representation**
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"Sometimes, a **visual approach** helps us see crowding at a glance. **How would you sketch or model** these sections to compare them?"
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- **If no response:**
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"Try drawing each seat as a box or circle. **Shade in** the occupied ones. Which diagram looks more crowded? Is one nearly full?"
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- **If incorrect or unclear:**
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"Check if your drawing **matches the actual counts**. Are you accurately representing the difference in total seats versus seats taken?"
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- **If correct:**
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"Awesome! **Here’s an AI-generated visual** reflecting those seat counts.
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*(AI-generated visual appears)*
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How does it match your own drawing? **Which section looks more crowded?**"
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---
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### **Final Reflection and Common Core Connections**
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- **"Before we wrap up, let’s reflect. Which Common Core Mathematical Practices did you lean on today, and how did they help you persevere in problem-solving?"**
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- **"How might seeing multiple ways of solving this problem align with the Standards for Mathematical Practice (e.g., #1 on perseverance, #2 on reasoning quantitatively)?"**
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---
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### **New Problem-Posing Activity (Ensures Consistency Across Modules)**
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- **"Now, try designing a similar problem. Could you adjust the number of seats or students while still testing proportional reasoning? Let’s see what you come up with!"**
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---
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"""
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