find-your-level

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Use when a learner's technical level is unknown or uncertain, requiring diagnostic calibration before teaching begins.

yugash007 By yugash007 schedule Updated 5/18/2026

name: find-your-level description: Use when a learner's technical level is unknown or uncertain, requiring diagnostic calibration before teaching begins. version: 1.1.0 authors: - edu-agent-skills contributors tags: [onboarding, level-detection, calibration, prerequisite-awareness] status: stable

Purpose

Diagnose a learner's actual knowledge level through targeted questions before teaching. Self-reported level ("I'm intermediate") is unreliable — use observable responses to calibrate depth, pacing, and starting point.

Activation

  • New learner with no prior profile. Self-reported level inconsistent with responses. New topic with unknown background. Stale profile (2+ weeks) needs reconfirmation. Learner says "I'm not sure where to start."
  • Skip if: profile exists and was recently confirmed, or level is clearly evident from conversation context.
  • Routing: run before repo-understand, teach-concept, and lesson-plan for new learners. If level is obvious (very beginner or clearly expert), a 1–2 question confirmation suffices — skip the full battery.

Inputs

  • Target domain/topic, any self-reported level, repo/project context if applicable.

Level Definitions

  • Beginner: can't explain core vocabulary or trace a basic example.
  • Early Intermediate: knows vocabulary, implements basics, struggles with composition/tradeoffs.
  • Intermediate: understands mechanism, makes reasonable tradeoffs, hits edge cases when pushed.
  • Advanced: reasons about edge cases, tradeoffs, production implications fluently; can teach it back.

Diagnostic Tiers

3–5 questions in escalating difficulty. Stop when ceiling is reached (two consecutive weak answers).

  • Tier 1: "Explain X in one sentence." → Fluent: advance. Not: Beginner.
  • Tier 2: "Write/describe a minimal example of X." → Correct mechanism: advance. Partial: Early Intermediate.
  • Tier 3: "When would you NOT use X?" → Genuine tradeoffs: advance. Vague: Intermediate.
  • Tier 4: "Describe a production failure mode involving X." → Detailed: Advanced. Partial: Intermediate-Advanced.

Workflow

  1. Align — Confirm domain and goal. Ask self-reported confidence (1–5). Record as starting hypothesis, not conclusion.
  2. Diagnose — Start at tier matching self-report minus one. Ask one question at a time. Listen for: correct vocabulary, mechanism, tradeoff awareness, edge case recognition.
  3. Infer — Level = highest tier answered confidently. If self-report disagrees with diagnostic: use diagnostic, note discrepancy tactfully.
  4. Confirm — State inferred level with rationale. Ask: "Does this feel right?" Adjust based on learner input.
  5. Recommend — Beginner: start at prerequisites. Early Intermediate: mechanism + applied examples. Intermediate: tradeoffs + project context. Advanced: edge cases or deep-dive.

Rules

  • DO: use domain-specific questions, not generic programming trivia.
  • DO: stop after two consecutive weak answers — don't interrogate.
  • DO: frame calibration as "here's where we'll start" — never "your self-assessment was wrong."
  • DO: always confirm inferred level with the learner before starting.
  • DON'T: accept self-report as sole decision — always run at least 2 diagnostic questions.
  • DON'T: shame overconfident learners.
  • DON'T: run all tiers mechanically when ceiling is clearly reached.

Output

Responses should contain: domain, self-reported confidence, diagnostic questions + response quality, inferred level with rationale, calibration check prompt, and recommended starting point. Format naturally.

Checklist

  • Diagnostic questions are domain-specific.
  • Battery stops when ceiling reached.
  • Inferred level stated with rationale and learner confirmation sought.
  • Starting point matches inferred level.
Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/yugash007/edu-agent-skills --skill find-your-level
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