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Study Guide

study-guide

Writes study guides with key concepts, review questions, memory aids, and exam preparation strategies.

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  1. This skill, packaged and ready to upload. study-guide.zip
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When to Use This Skill

Use this skill when you need to:

  • Create a study guide that consolidates key concepts from a course or training
  • Build review materials with questions, memory aids, and practice exercises
  • Design exam preparation documents with study strategies and focus areas
  • Produce reference sheets learners can use during and after a program

DO NOT use this skill for full course content, lesson plans, or assessments. This is a supplementary resource that helps learners review and retain what they have already been taught.


Core Principle

A STUDY GUIDE IS A MAP, NOT A TEXTBOOK — IT TELLS LEARNERS WHAT MATTERS MOST, HOW TO REMEMBER IT, AND WHERE THEY ARE WEAKEST SO THEY CAN STUDY SMART, NOT JUST STUDY MORE.


Phase 1: Brief

Required Inputs

Input What to Ask Default
Subject matter "What course, module, or topic should this study guide cover?" No default — must be provided
Source material "Share the course outline, lesson notes, or key topics to include." No default — must be provided
Purpose "Is this for an exam, certification, self-review, or ongoing reference?" Self-review
Learner level "Are learners beginners, intermediate, or advanced in this topic?" Intermediate
Format preference "Do you want a structured document, flashcard set, or one-page cheat sheet?" Structured document

GATE: Confirm the brief and receive source material before proceeding.


Phase 2: Organize

Study Guide Structure

1. Overview — what the guide covers and how to use it
2. Key Concepts — organized by topic with definitions and examples
3. Frameworks and Models — visual summaries of key frameworks
4. Review Questions — self-test per topic area
5. Memory Aids — mnemonics, acronyms, and association techniques
6. Common Mistakes — what learners typically get wrong
7. Quick Reference — one-page cheat sheet of the most important points

Topic Prioritization

Rank every topic as:

  • Must know — core concepts tested or applied frequently
  • Should know — important context that supports core concepts
  • Nice to know — supplementary details that add depth

Focus 70% of the study guide on "must know" topics.

GATE: Present the topic list with priority rankings for approval.


Phase 3: Write

Key Concepts Section

For each concept:

### [Concept Name]
**Definition:** [One clear sentence]
**Why it matters:** [Business application in one sentence]
**Example:** [Concrete, real-world example]
**Remember:** [Memory aid — acronym, analogy, or association]

Review Questions

Write 3-5 questions per major topic:

  • Mix question types: definition recall, application scenarios, compare/contrast
  • Include answers on a separate page or in a collapsible section
  • Mark difficulty level (basic, intermediate, advanced)
**Q:** [Question text]
**Difficulty:** [Basic / Intermediate / Advanced]
**A:** [Answer]
**Why:** [Brief explanation of why this answer is correct]

Memory Aids

For complex frameworks or multi-step processes, create:

  • Acronyms — first-letter memory devices (e.g., AIDA for Attention, Interest, Desire, Action)
  • Analogies — connect new concepts to familiar things
  • Visual maps — describe a diagram or flowchart the learner can sketch
  • Chunking — group related items into 3-5 categories

Quick Reference Sheet

One page maximum with:

  • Key definitions (10-15 max)
  • Core formulas or frameworks
  • Common mistakes to avoid
  • Decision-making shortcuts

Phase 4: Polish

1. Study Plan

Provide a recommended study schedule:

## Suggested Study Plan

**Day 1:** Read through key concepts (30 min)
**Day 2:** Answer review questions without looking at notes (20 min)
**Day 3:** Review wrong answers, revisit weak areas (20 min)
**Day 4:** Quiz a partner or recite key frameworks aloud (15 min)
**Day 5:** Review quick reference sheet only (10 min)

2. Self-Assessment Checklist

## Am I Ready?
- [ ] I can define all "must know" concepts without looking
- [ ] I can apply each framework to a real scenario
- [ ] I scored 80%+ on the review questions
- [ ] I can explain each concept to someone with no background
- [ ] I know which topics I am weakest on and have reviewed them twice

3. Quality Check

  • Every "must know" topic has a concept entry, review question, and memory aid
  • Review questions have complete answers with explanations
  • Quick reference fits on one printable page
  • No jargon is used without a definition provided earlier in the guide

Example 1: Digital Marketing Fundamentals Study Guide

### Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)
**Definition:** The total cost to acquire one new customer.
**Why it matters:** If CAC exceeds customer lifetime value, you lose money on every sale.
**Example:** Spent $500 on ads, got 10 customers = $50 CAC.
**Remember:** CAC = "Cash to Acquire a Customer"

Example 2: Business Finance Basics Quick Reference

## Quick Reference
- Revenue - Expenses = Profit
- Gross Margin = (Revenue - COGS) / Revenue
- Break-even = Fixed Costs / (Price - Variable Cost per Unit)
- Rule of thumb: Keep CAC below 1/3 of LTV

Anti-Patterns

  • Rewriting the entire course — a study guide summarizes and reinforces, it does not reteach. Keep it concise.
  • No prioritization — treating every topic equally means learners waste time on low-value details.
  • Questions without answers — review questions are useless if learners cannot check their work.
  • Walls of text — use tables, bullets, and formatting. Study guides must be scannable.
  • No memory aids — definitions alone do not stick. Every core concept needs a hook for recall.
  • Skipping the quick reference — the one-page cheat sheet is often the most-used part of the entire guide.

Recovery

  • No source material provided: Ask the user to list the 10 most important topics from memory. Build the guide from that list.
  • Too many topics: Enforce the must/should/nice framework. Cut "nice to know" topics entirely if the guide exceeds 10 pages.
  • User wants flashcards only: Create Q&A pairs in a format compatible with Anki or Quizlet (front/back format).
  • Subject matter is highly technical: Add a glossary section at the top with all specialized terms defined before diving into concepts.

View source on GitHub →