The reality: your prompts are probably rubbish. If you’re asking ChatGPT to “summarise this chapter,” you’re just paying for a glorified highlighter that doesn’t help you pass exams. You’re still doing the cognitive grunt work while the machine takes a nap.

Force the AI into a pedagogical chokehold

The UK curriculum loves to reward specific mark schemes, not general knowledge. Stop asking for summaries and start demanding active recall templates. Look, if you don’t tell the AI to act as a “Senior Examiner for [Subject],” you’re getting the Wikipedia-lite version.

The goal is to make the AI identify the high-yield concepts that actually turn up in papers. Demand that it produces five “Why” questions for every “What” fact. If you can’t explain the causal link between two concepts, you haven’t learned anything—you’ve just memorised noise.

Break the “Feyman” prompt for complex modules

Forget the generic “explain like I’m five” nonsense. It’s too simple for a third-year Law or Engineering module. Instead, tell the AI to identify the three most common misconceptions about a topic and then write a dialogue between a sceptic and an expert.

This forces the LLM to navigate the nuance of the subject rather than just regurgitating a textbook definition. Maximise your efficiency by asking for the “concept-to-analogy” ratio to be 1:1. If the AI can’t give you a brutal, real-world analogy for a theoretical framework, it hasn’t understood your request.

Stop the output before it gets boring

Long-winded AI responses are where productivity goes to die. Use a “Length-Constraint” prompt to keep things punchy. Tell it: “Give me the logic, the evidence, and the counter-argument in under 150 words.”

The reality: if you can’t read the AI’s output in the time it takes to drink an espresso, you won’t use it to revise. Rigidly enforce brevity to ensure you’re only consuming the signal, not the noise.

💡 The Underground Pro-Tip: Upload your university’s specific module handbook and the last three years of past papers. Use a prompt that says: “Cross-reference the lecture notes I’ve provided with the specific phrasing used in the ‘Distinction’ category of the official mark scheme. Identify the linguistic patterns I need to mimic to hit the top bracket.” Most unis hate this because it turns the exam into a pattern-matching exercise rather than a test of “passion.”

Stop chatting with the bot and start programming your academic success.

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