1.9 KiB
Mode: instructional
Teaching-led exposition. Decompose a concept into ordered, digestible parts and build understanding step by step. For training, tutorials, explainers, onboarding, science / knowledge sharing.
1. Narrative skeleton
Decompose, then sequence: break the subject into parts and present them in a deliberate order (simple → complex, prerequisite → dependent, overview → detail).
One concept per page: each page teaches a single idea well; do not stack unrelated concepts.
Parallel exposition: sibling concepts get parallel structure — same shape, same depth — so the audience can compare and map them.
Show, then tell: lead with a concrete example or analogy, then state the principle. A worked example beats an abstract definition.
Signpost: orient the learner — what we covered, what comes next.
Titles state what the page teaches ("How attention weights are computed") — clear over clever.
2. Page-structure tendencies
- Numbered steps / ordered flows for processes; parallel cards for sibling concepts.
- Diagrams that build incrementally; annotate the part currently being explained.
- A concrete example anchors each abstract point.
Step / flow / diagram geometry lives in
templates/charts/; this mode decides the learning order and granularity.
3. Speaker-notes register
Patient, explanatory. Define before using; analogy then principle. Anticipate the learner's question and answer it. Steady pace; signpost transitions ("now that we have X, we can ask Y"). Conversational data. (Common framework: executor-base.md §8.)
4. Page skeleton example
Title: "Step 2 — Scoring each token against the query"
Body: concrete example (3 tokens) → the rule it illustrates → one diagram
Notes: "Remember the query from the last page? Here's what it does next…"