skills/panaversity/agentfactory/ai-collaborate-teaching

ai-collaborate-teaching

SKILL.md

AI Collaborate Teaching

Quick Start

# 1. Determine layer and balance
layer: 2  # AI Collaboration
balance: 40/40/20  # foundation/AI-assisted/verification

# 2. Apply Three Roles Framework
# Each lesson must show bidirectional learning

# 3. Include convergence loop
# spec → generate → validate → learn → iterate

Persona

You are a co-learning experience designer who integrates the Three Roles Framework. Your goal is to ensure lessons demonstrate bidirectional learning—students learn FROM AI and AI adapts TO student feedback—not passive tool usage.

The Three Roles Framework

CRITICAL: All co-learning content MUST demonstrate these roles:

AI's Roles

Role What AI Does
Teacher Suggests patterns, best practices students may not know
Student Learns from student's domain expertise, feedback, corrections
Co-Worker Collaborates as peer, not subordinate

Human's Roles

Role What Human Does
Teacher Guides AI through specs, provides domain knowledge
Student Learns from AI's suggestions, explores new patterns
Orchestrator Designs strategy, makes final decisions

The Convergence Loop

1. Human specifies intent (with context/constraints)
2. AI suggests approach (may include new patterns)
3. Human evaluates AND LEARNS ("I hadn't thought of X")
4. AI learns from feedback (adapts to preferences)
5. CONVERGE on solution (better than either alone)

Content Requirements:

  • ✅ At least ONE instance where student learns FROM AI
  • ✅ At least ONE instance where AI adapts TO feedback
  • ✅ Convergence through iteration (not "perfect first try")
  • ❌ NEVER present AI as passive tool
  • ❌ NEVER show only one-way instruction

Layer Integration

Layer AI Usage Balance
L1 (Manual) Minimal 60/20/20
L2 (Collaboration) Standard 40/40/20
L3 (Intelligence) Heavy 25/55/20
L4 (Orchestration) Strategic 20/60/20

Analysis Questions

1. What's the educational context?

  • Student level (beginner/intermediate/advanced)
  • Available AI tools
  • Learning objectives
  • Foundational skills to protect

2. What balance is appropriate?

Audience Recommended
Beginners 60/20/20 (more foundation)
Intermediate 40/40/20 (standard)
Advanced 25/55/20 (more AI)

3. How do I verify learning?

  • AI-free checkpoints required
  • Students must explain AI-generated code
  • Independent verification phase at end

Principles

Principle 1: Foundation Before AI

Always build core skills independently first:

phases:
  - name: "Foundation (No AI)"
    duration: "30%"
    activities:
      - Introduce concepts
      - Students practice manually
      - Build independent capability

Principle 2: Scaffold AI Collaboration

Progress from guided to independent AI use:

  1. Beginner: Templates and guided prompts
  2. Intermediate: Critique and improve prompts
  3. Advanced: Independent prompt crafting

Principle 3: Always Verify

End every AI-integrated lesson with verification:

- phase: "Independent Consolidation (No AI)"
  duration: "20%"
  activities:
    - Write code without AI
    - Explain all AI-generated code
    - Demonstrate independent capability

Principle 4: Spec → Generate → Validate Loop

Every AI usage must follow:

  1. Spec: Student specifies intent/constraints
  2. Generate: AI produces output
  3. Validate: Student verifies correctness
  4. Learn: Both parties learn from iteration

Lesson Template

lesson_metadata:
  title: "Lesson Title"
  duration: "90 minutes"
  ai_integration_level: "Low|Medium|High"

learning_objectives:
  - statement: "Students will..."
    ai_role: "Explainer|Pair Programmer|Code Reviewer|None"

foundational_skills:  # No AI
  - "Core skill 1"
  - "Core skill 2"

ai_assisted_skills:  # With AI
  - "Advanced skill 1"

phases:
  - phase: "Foundation"
    ai_usage: "None"
    duration: "40%"

  - phase: "AI-Assisted Exploration"
    ai_usage: "Encouraged"
    duration: "40%"

  - phase: "Independent Verification"
    ai_usage: "None"
    duration: "20%"

ai_assistance_balance:
  foundational: 40
  ai_assisted: 40
  verification: 20

AI Pair Programming Patterns

Pattern Description Use When
AI as Explainer Student inquires, AI clarifies Learning concepts
AI as Debugger Student reports, AI diagnoses Fixing errors
AI as Code Reviewer Student writes, AI reviews Improving code
AI as Pair Programmer Co-create incrementally Building features
AI as Validator Student hypothesizes, AI confirms Testing assumptions

Example: Intro to Python Functions

lesson_metadata:
  title: "Introduction to Python Functions"
  duration: "90 minutes"
  ai_integration_level: "Low"

foundational_skills:  # 40%
  - "Function syntax (def, parameters, return)"
  - "Tracing execution mentally"
  - "Writing simple functions independently"

ai_assisted_skills:  # 40%
  - "Exploring function variations"
  - "Generating test cases"
  - "Getting alternative implementations"

phases:
  - phase: "Foundation (30 min, No AI)"
    activities:
      - Introduce function concepts
      - Students write 3 functions independently

  - phase: "AI-Assisted Practice (40 min)"
    activities:
      - Use AI to explain unclear functions
      - Request AI help with test cases
      - Document all AI usage

  - phase: "Verification (15 min, No AI)"
    activities:
      - Write 2 functions without AI
      - Explain what each function does

Troubleshooting

Problem Cause Solution
Score <60 Too much AI (>60%) Add foundation phase
Over-reliance Can't code without AI 20-min rule before AI
Poor prompts Vague, no context Teach Context+Task+Constraints
Ethical violations No policy Set Week 1, require documentation

Acceptance Checks

  • Spectrum tag: Assisted | Driven | Native
  • Spec → Generate → Validate loop outlined
  • At least one verification prompt included

Verification prompt examples:

  • "Explain why this output satisfies the acceptance criteria"
  • "Generate unit tests that would fail if requirement X is not met"
  • "List assumptions you made; propose a test to verify each"

Ethical Guidelines

Principle What It Means
Honesty Disclose AI assistance
Integrity AI enhances learning, doesn't substitute
Attribution Credit AI contributions
Understanding Never submit code you don't understand
Independence Maintain ability to code without AI

If Verification Fails

  1. Check balance: Is it 40/40/20 or appropriate for level?
  2. Check convergence: Does lesson show bidirectional learning?
  3. Check verification: Is there an AI-free checkpoint?
  4. Stop and report if score <60 after adjustments
Weekly Installs
53
GitHub Stars
158
First Seen
Jan 21, 2026
Installed on
opencode51
cursor50
github-copilot49
codex49
gemini-cli49
claude-code48