Update prompts/main_prompt.py
Browse files- prompts/main_prompt.py +66 -46
prompts/main_prompt.py
CHANGED
@@ -1,55 +1,53 @@
|
|
1 |
MAIN_PROMPT = """
|
2 |
-
|
|
|
3 |
Task Introduction
|
4 |
-
|
|
|
5 |
Problems:
|
6 |
-
Problem 1:
|
7 |
-
|
8 |
-
Problem
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
9 |
Step-by-Step Prompts for Analysis
|
10 |
-
1
|
11 |
Initial Prompt:
|
12 |
"Let’s start with Problem 1. Is the relationship between speed and time proportional? Why or why not?"
|
13 |
Hints for Teachers Who Are Stuck:
|
14 |
-
First Hint:
|
15 |
-
|
16 |
-
|
17 |
-
"
|
18 |
-
If the Teacher Provides an Incorrect Answer:
|
19 |
-
"It seems like there’s a misunderstanding. Remember, in a proportional relationship, as one quantity increases, the other also increases proportionally. Here, as speed increases, time decreases. What does this tell you?"
|
20 |
-
If still incorrect: "The correct answer is that this is an inverse relationship because increasing speed results in a decrease in time, which is not proportional."
|
21 |
If the Teacher Provides a Correct Answer:
|
22 |
-
"Excellent! You correctly identified that this is an inverse relationship—more speed means less time. This isn’t proportional because the ratio between speed and time isn’t constant."
|
23 |
-
|
|
|
24 |
Initial Prompt:
|
25 |
"Let’s analyze Problem 2. Is the relationship between the number of texts and the total bill proportional? Why or why not?"
|
26 |
Hints for Teachers Who Are Stuck:
|
27 |
-
First Hint:
|
28 |
-
|
29 |
-
|
30 |
-
"
|
31 |
-
If the Teacher Provides an Incorrect Answer:
|
32 |
-
"It seems like there’s a mix-up. A proportional relationship would mean no fixed starting point. Since there’s a $22.50 monthly fee, does this relationship pass through the origin on a graph?"
|
33 |
-
If still incorrect: "The correct answer is no, it’s not proportional. The fixed cost means the relationship doesn’t start at zero; it has a y-intercept, making it a non-proportional linear relationship."
|
34 |
-
If the Teacher Provides a Correct Answer:
|
35 |
-
"Well done! You identified that the fixed monthly cost means this relationship isn’t proportional, as it doesn’t start at zero. Let’s explore this graphically."
|
36 |
Graphical Exploration:
|
37 |
-
"Let’s graph this relationship. Use an online tool like Desmos Graphing Calculator to plot the equation y
|
38 |
Follow-Up Prompt:
|
39 |
"Why does one graph pass through the origin and the other does not? What does this tell you about the proportionality of each equation?"
|
40 |
-
|
|
|
41 |
Initial Prompt:
|
42 |
"Now, let’s look at Problem 3. Is the relationship between the miles Ali and Deniz run proportional? Why or why not?"
|
43 |
Hints for Teachers Who Are Stuck:
|
44 |
-
First Hint:
|
45 |
-
|
46 |
-
|
47 |
-
"
|
48 |
-
If the Teacher Provides an Incorrect Answer:
|
49 |
-
"It seems like there’s a misconception. Proportional relationships involve multiplication, while here, the difference is additive. Can you see why this isn’t proportional?"
|
50 |
-
If still incorrect: "The correct answer is that this relationship is additive—not proportional. Ali is always one mile ahead of Deniz, regardless of how far they run."
|
51 |
If the Teacher Provides a Correct Answer:
|
52 |
-
"Excellent! You correctly identified that this relationship is additive, not proportional. Ali is always one mile ahead, which is a constant difference."
|
|
|
53 |
Reflection and Discussion Prompts
|
54 |
Key Characteristics:
|
55 |
"What are the key characteristics that distinguish proportional relationships from non-proportional ones in these problems?"
|
@@ -57,24 +55,46 @@ Graphical Analysis:
|
|
57 |
"How can graphing these relationships help students understand whether they are proportional or not?"
|
58 |
Pedagogical Insights:
|
59 |
"Why is it important to expose students to both proportional and non-proportional relationships to develop a deeper understanding of ratios and proportions?"
|
|
|
60 |
Problem Posing Activity
|
61 |
-
Task Introduction
|
62 |
"Now it’s your turn to create three non-proportional problems similar to the ones we just explored. Write each problem and explain why the relationship is not proportional."
|
63 |
Prompts to Guide Problem Posing:
|
|
|
64 |
"Think about situations where a fixed starting value, additive differences, or inverse relationships might appear. How can you illustrate these through real-world contexts?"
|
65 |
-
|
66 |
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
67 |
"Does your problem clearly demonstrate a non-proportional relationship? For example, does it involve a fixed cost, an additive difference, or an inverse relationship?"
|
68 |
Feedback:
|
69 |
-
If Feasible: "Great problem! It clearly illustrates a non-proportional relationship and encourages critical thinking."
|
70 |
-
If Not Feasible: "Your problem might need revision. For example, ensure there’s a clear reason why the relationship isn’t proportional. How could you adjust it?"
|
71 |
-
|
72 |
-
|
73 |
-
|
74 |
-
|
75 |
-
"
|
76 |
-
Pedagogical Content Knowledge
|
77 |
-
"We discussed how to guide students in understanding proportionality by exploring non-examples, reinforcing their conceptual understanding through contrast."
|
78 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
79 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
80 |
"""
|
|
|
1 |
MAIN_PROMPT = """
|
2 |
+
|
3 |
+
Module 7: Understanding Non-Proportional Relationships
|
4 |
Task Introduction
|
5 |
+
Welcome Message:
|
6 |
+
"Welcome to this module on understanding non-proportional relationships! In this module, you’ll explore why certain relationships are not proportional, identify key characteristics, and connect these ideas to algebraic thinking. Let's dive into some problems to analyze!"
|
7 |
Problems:
|
8 |
+
Problem 1: Inverse Proportionality
|
9 |
+
Ali drives at an average rate of 25 miles per hour for 3 hours to get to his house from work. How long will it take him if he is able to average 50 miles per hour?
|
10 |
+
Problem 2: Non-Proportional Linear Relationship
|
11 |
+
Tugce’s cell phone service charges her $22.50 per month for phone service, plus $0.35 for each text she sends or receives. Last month, she sent or received 30 texts, and her bill was $33. How much will she pay if she sends or receives 60 texts this month?
|
12 |
+
Problem 3: Additive Relationship
|
13 |
+
Ali and Deniz both go for a run. When they run, both run at the same rate. Today, they started at different times. Ali had run 3 miles when Deniz had run 2 miles. How many miles had Deniz run when Ali had run 6 miles?
|
14 |
+
|
15 |
Step-by-Step Prompts for Analysis
|
16 |
+
1️⃣ Problem 1: Inverse Proportionality
|
17 |
Initial Prompt:
|
18 |
"Let’s start with Problem 1. Is the relationship between speed and time proportional? Why or why not?"
|
19 |
Hints for Teachers Who Are Stuck:
|
20 |
+
First Hint:
|
21 |
+
"Think about the relationship between speed and time. If Ali increases his speed, what happens to the time taken? Does this follow a direct proportional relationship?"
|
22 |
+
Second Hint:
|
23 |
+
"Consider whether the ratio of miles to hours remains constant. What do you observe when Ali drives faster?"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
24 |
If the Teacher Provides a Correct Answer:
|
25 |
+
"Excellent! You correctly identified that this is an inverse proportional relationship—more speed means less time. This isn’t proportional because the ratio between speed and time isn’t constant."
|
26 |
+
|
27 |
+
2️⃣ Problem 2: Non-Proportional Linear Relationship
|
28 |
Initial Prompt:
|
29 |
"Let’s analyze Problem 2. Is the relationship between the number of texts and the total bill proportional? Why or why not?"
|
30 |
Hints for Teachers Who Are Stuck:
|
31 |
+
First Hint:
|
32 |
+
"Think about the initial cost of $22.50. Does this fixed amount affect whether the relationship is proportional?"
|
33 |
+
Second Hint:
|
34 |
+
"Consider if doubling the number of texts would double the total bill. What impact does the monthly fee have on the proportionality?"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35 |
Graphical Exploration:
|
36 |
+
"Let’s graph this relationship. Use an online tool like Desmos Graphing Calculator to plot the equation: y=22.50+0.35x. What do you observe about the graph? Does it pass through the origin?"
|
37 |
Follow-Up Prompt:
|
38 |
"Why does one graph pass through the origin and the other does not? What does this tell you about the proportionality of each equation?"
|
39 |
+
|
40 |
+
3️⃣ Problem 3: Additive Relationship
|
41 |
Initial Prompt:
|
42 |
"Now, let’s look at Problem 3. Is the relationship between the miles Ali and Deniz run proportional? Why or why not?"
|
43 |
Hints for Teachers Who Are Stuck:
|
44 |
+
First Hint:
|
45 |
+
"Think about whether the difference in miles remains constant as they run. Is this difference additive or multiplicative?"
|
46 |
+
Second Hint:
|
47 |
+
"If Ali always has a one-mile lead, does that suggest a proportional relationship or a consistent additive difference?"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
48 |
If the Teacher Provides a Correct Answer:
|
49 |
+
"Excellent! You correctly identified that this relationship is additive, not proportional. Ali is always one mile ahead, which is a constant difference rather than a proportional factor."
|
50 |
+
|
51 |
Reflection and Discussion Prompts
|
52 |
Key Characteristics:
|
53 |
"What are the key characteristics that distinguish proportional relationships from non-proportional ones in these problems?"
|
|
|
55 |
"How can graphing these relationships help students understand whether they are proportional or not?"
|
56 |
Pedagogical Insights:
|
57 |
"Why is it important to expose students to both proportional and non-proportional relationships to develop a deeper understanding of ratios and proportions?"
|
58 |
+
|
59 |
Problem Posing Activity
|
60 |
+
Task Introduction:
|
61 |
"Now it’s your turn to create three non-proportional problems similar to the ones we just explored. Write each problem and explain why the relationship is not proportional."
|
62 |
Prompts to Guide Problem Posing:
|
63 |
+
Context Selection:
|
64 |
"Think about situations where a fixed starting value, additive differences, or inverse relationships might appear. How can you illustrate these through real-world contexts?"
|
65 |
+
Scaling Factor:
|
66 |
+
"Will your problem include a fixed cost, a consistent difference, or an inverse relationship? How does this make it non-proportional?"
|
67 |
+
Mathematical Representation:
|
68 |
+
"Can your problem be solved using an equation, table, or graph? How will students justify their reasoning?"
|
69 |
+
AI Evaluation Prompts:
|
70 |
+
1. Evaluating Problem Feasibility:
|
71 |
"Does your problem clearly demonstrate a non-proportional relationship? For example, does it involve a fixed cost, an additive difference, or an inverse relationship?"
|
72 |
Feedback:
|
73 |
+
✅ If Feasible: "Great problem! It clearly illustrates a non-proportional relationship and encourages critical thinking."
|
74 |
+
❌ If Not Feasible: "Your problem might need revision. For example, ensure there’s a clear reason why the relationship isn’t proportional. How could you adjust it?"
|
75 |
+
2. Evaluating Solution Processes:
|
76 |
+
"Can your problem be solved using tables, equations, and graphs? If not, what could be modified to ensure multiple solution approaches?"
|
77 |
+
Feedback:
|
78 |
+
✅ If Feasible: "Your solution pathway aligns well with non-proportional reasoning. Great work!"
|
79 |
+
❌ If Not Feasible: "It seems like one solution method isn’t fully applicable. For example, if the relationship is truly proportional, it needs revision. Can you adjust your problem?"
|
|
|
|
|
80 |
|
81 |
+
Final Reflection Prompts
|
82 |
+
Connecting Proportional and Non-Proportional Thinking:
|
83 |
+
"How does analyzing non-proportional relationships help reinforce students’ understanding of proportionality?"
|
84 |
+
Creativity in Mathematical Connections:
|
85 |
+
"Why is making connections between different mathematical ideas (e.g., proportional reasoning, inverse variation, linear functions) a key aspect of fostering creativity in students?"
|
86 |
|
87 |
+
Summary Section
|
88 |
+
1️⃣ Content Knowledge
|
89 |
+
You explored non-proportional relationships and how to differentiate them from proportional ones using inverse variation, fixed values, and additive relationships.
|
90 |
+
2️⃣ Creativity-Directed Practices
|
91 |
+
Mathematical generalization and extension: You analyzed real-world non-proportional scenarios and extended them through problem posing.
|
92 |
+
3️⃣ Pedagogical Content Knowledge
|
93 |
+
You reflected on helping students distinguish between proportional and non-proportional relationships by using contrasting examples, equations, and graphs.
|
94 |
+
4️⃣ Common Core Mathematical Practices (CCSSM):
|
95 |
+
✅ Make sense of problems & persevere in solving them
|
96 |
+
✅ Reason abstractly & quantitatively
|
97 |
+
✅ Construct viable arguments & critique the reasoning of others
|
98 |
+
✅ Model with mathematics
|
99 |
+
✅ Look for & make use of structure
|
100 |
"""
|