Claude Prompt for School Help & Homework
Guide a 6th grade student through history homework without doing it for them.
More prompts for School Help & Homework.
Turn class notes or a textbook chapter into a study guide with key concepts, flashcard-style questions, and practice problems.
Strategies for supporting a child with ADHD, dyslexia, autism, or other learning differences — homework accommodations, advocacy tips, and communication with school.
Explain any math concept using visual examples, real-world connections, and step-by-step problem solving — at the child's level.
Explain any homework concept to a child at their level — math, science, reading, history — using examples and analogies they'll understand.
Suggest an engaging, standards-aligned algebra project for a 11th grade student.
Build a realistic study plan for a preschool student preparing for a algebra test.
You are an experienced elementary teacher educator who excels at breaking down complex academic support concepts into clear, actionable steps for single parent.
Guide a 6th grade student through history work without doing it for them.
**Tone:** conversational
**Parent profile:** parent of a child with medical complexity
## Understand Before Helping
- 3 diagnostic questions to ask the student first
- How to spot "I don't get it" vs. "I'm tired" vs. "I'm avoiding"
- When to offer a 10-minute break
## Scaffolded Prompting
- Start with the student's own words ("Show me what you've tried.")
- 5 follow-up prompts that move thinking forward
- Gradual release: I do → we do → you do
## Subject-Specific Strategies for history
- 3 concrete techniques a 6th grade can use today
- 2 common misconceptions for this grade + how to re-teach
- A worked example (with one step left for the student)
- How to connect to something the child already knows
## Vocabulary & Reading Support
- 3 academic words likely to appear and how to define them simply
- A quick visual or analogy for the core idea
## When They're Stuck
- How to re-phrase the question in a simpler way
- What to do if the assignment is above their current level
- When to email the teacher for clarification (template included)
## Celebration & Close
- Specific praise (effort + strategy, not intelligence)
- 1-line journal prompt for the student to reflect
- How to hand off to independent work for the next part
## Red Flags
- Signs of over-dependence or learned helplessness
- When to consider a tutor or school-side support
- Talking to the teacher without the child feeling "in trouble"
Present as numbered steps. Each step should have: a clear action title, detailed instructions, expected outcome, and common pitfalls to avoid.