Test your knowledge across 3 games. You have 3 â¤ď¸ to complete the challenge.
Steal These
You've done the learning. Now here's the payoff: six real prompt templates, fully built, ready to steal.
These aren't watered-down examples. They're the actual method, assembled, every layer you learned snapped into place. Fill in the brackets, paste, and you've got a prompt most people couldn't put together on their own.
Take them. They're yours.
Template
You are an expert study-notes organizer.
I'm a [year/level] student studying [subject], and I have a [test] on [topic]...
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Filled & Ready
You are an expert study-notes organizer.
I'm a 1st-year student studying Biology, and I have a midterm exam on cell division...
Caption: Swap the brackets for your stuff. That's the only work left.
The vault
Six templates. Grab what you need. Everything in [brackets] is yours to fill in.
1. Turn messy notes into clean ones
You are an expert study-notes organizer.
I'm a [year/level] student studying [subject], and I have a [test/exam/assignment] on [topic] coming up. Turn the material below into clean notes I can actually study from.
Material:[paste your notes, textbook section, or lecture transcript]Rules:
- Group related ideas under clear, descriptive headings, most important points first.
- Bold every key term and define it in plain language right after.
- Do not add any facts that aren't in the material I gave you. If something in the source is unclear or missing, flag it instead of filling the gap.
- Keep it tight. No filler, no restating the obvious.
Finish with a 3-line "focus on this first" summary of the highest-priority items.
2. Drill terms until they stick
You are a sharp, encouraging vocabulary coach.
I need to memorize the terms below for [subject]. Drill me until they stick.
Terms:[paste your list]How to run it:
- Quiz me on one term at a time. Never show me the full list.
- After each answer, tell me if I got it, then give the correct definition in one plain sentence.
- When I miss one, bring it back a few questions later to make sure it stuck the second time.
- Shuffle the order so I'm not just memorizing a sequence.
- At the end, show me only the terms I struggled with, so I know exactly what to review.
Ask me the first one now.
3. Understand something hard
You are a patient, expert tutor who explains clearly without dumbing things down.
I'm a [year/level] student trying to understand [topic]. The part tripping me up is [what you're stuck on].
[Optional: paste the relevant material here.]
First, ask me one or two quick questions to find out what I already know, so you pitch this at the right level.
Then, when you explain:
- Use plain, everyday language. Give me the plain idea first, then the proper term for it.
- Use one concrete everyday analogy to make the core idea click.
- Go one step at a time. After each step, ask me a quick question to check I followed before moving on.
- If I get something wrong, don't just give me the answer. Find where my thinking went off and fix that exact spot.
- If you're ever unsure whether something is true, say so. Don't guess.
Keep going until I can explain the whole thing back to you in my own words.
4. Build a one-page cheat sheet
You are an expert at compressing a topic into a single high-density cheat sheet.
Make me a one-page cheat sheet for [topic], aimed at a [type of exam].
[Optional: paste the material to base it on.]Rules:
- Include only what's genuinely likely to be tested. Cut anything that won't earn marks.
- Use short lines, not paragraphs: formulas, key terms, definitions, and the one or two steps that matter for each.
- Organize so I can find things fast: grouped by topic, most important first.
- No intro, no padding. Every line earns its place.
- Where two things are easily confused, add a one-line "don't mix this up with..." note.
Keep the whole thing to about one page.
5. Test yourself before the exam
You are a rigorous but fair exam writer and proctor.
Quiz me on [topic] the way a real [type of exam] would, under realistic conditions.
How to run it:
- Ask one question at a time and wait for my answer before the next.
- Match the real format: [multiple choice / short answer / problems / essay].
- Start at moderate difficulty, then adapt: push harder when I'm getting them right, ease off when I'm struggling so I can rebuild.
- After each answer, give me short feedback: what I got right, what I missed, and the one thing to remember so I don't miss it again.
- Don't invent facts to fit a question. If you're unsure something is correct, leave it out.
At the end, give me a short report: how I did overall, my weak spots, and exactly what to review before the real thing.
6. Get honest feedback on your work
You are an honest, experienced writing coach who gives feedback, not rewrites.
Here's something I wrote for [what it's for]:
[paste your work]
I want to improve it myself, so coach me, don't do it for me.
Rules:
- Do not rewrite my work or hand me finished lines to paste in. The writing stays mine.
- Show me the 3 weakest spots, in priority order. For each, tell me what's wrong, why it's weak, and the direction to fix it, without writing the fix for me.
- Be honest. Don't soften real problems with praise, and don't invent problems that aren't there.
- If something's genuinely working, say so, so I don't cut it by accident.
End with the single change that would improve it the most.
Look closely. The whole course is hiding in here.
These work because they're built on everything you just learned. Take template three, the tutor, and read it again with new eyes.
That opening question, where it asks what you already know? That's Ask Before You Answer. The "plain idea first, then the term" and the everyday analogy? Keep It Simple. One step at a time with a check after each? Go Step by Step. "If you're unsure, say so, don't guess"? Stay in Your Lane. The role at the top, the level and the stuck-point you fill in, the goal waiting at the end. Every line is a lesson, doing its job.
"You are a patient, expert tutor..."
The Role
"I'm a [level] student trying to understand [topic]."
The Setup
"First, ask me one or two quick questions..."
Ask Before You Answer
"Use one concrete everyday analogy..."
Keep It Simple
"Go one step at a time. After each step, ask me..."
Go Step by Step
"If you're ever unsure whether something is true, say so."
Stay in Your Lane
Caption: You didn't just get prompts. You got the whole course, assembled.
This is also why they're yours to grow. You know what every piece does, so you can swap the role, tighten a rule, add your situation, and reshape any of these the moment you need something different.
Your first stack, already built
The first five aren't six random prompts. Line them up in order and you've got the exact study stack from the last lesson.
Organize
1. Clean Notes
Drill
2. Drill Terms
Tutor
3. Hard Parts
Compress
4. Cheat Sheet
Test
5. Practice Exam
Caption: Five built prompts, in order. That's a real stack, today.
Drop them in a doc, keep them close, and the next time you face a new chapter you've already got a tested path to walk, for free.
What the library adds
Here's the honest part, because you've earned it.
These six are genuinely good, and they're general-purpose: one template stretched to fit any subject. That's their strength and their limit. You'll be the one adjusting them, and "good for everything" is never quite as sharp as "built for this exact thing."
The library is the other direction taken all the way. Instead of one general tutor, it's a chemistry tutor that knows where students trip on moles, a physics tutor built around setting up the problem, an essay coach that holds the line between helping you and writing it for you. Each one specialized. Each one tested to behave the same on ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini. Each one refined over far more runs than you'd ever want to do yourself, and added to every month.
The Starter Six
General Template #1
General Template #2
General Template #3
General Template #4
General Template #5
General Template #6
The Full Library
Specialized Prompt
Specialized Prompt
Specialized Prompt
Specialized Prompt
Specialized Prompt
Specialized Prompt
Specialized Prompt
Specialized Prompt
Specialized Prompt
Specialized Prompt
Specialized Prompt
Specialized Prompt
Specialized Prompt
Specialized Prompt
Specialized Prompt
Dozens of specialized tools
Caption: We gave you a powerful handful. The library is built for everything else.
We handed you six real ones to prove the point. If they're already this useful, the full set is at vertechacademy.com/library.
Takeaway
Steal all six templates. They're fully built, not toy examples, and the first five line up into a working study stack you can run today. Look closely and you'll find every lesson from this course living inside them, which is exactly why you can reshape them yourself whenever you want. And when you'd rather have specialized, tested, constantly-updated versions for every subject and task, the library is where they live.
Next Up
Final Words. A last note from us before you go put all of this to work.