Course Content
What is Prompt Engineering? (Basics for Everyone)
By the end of this section, you will understand what prompt engineering is, why it matters so much when using modern AI tools, and how AI chatbots "think" when they receive your instructions. This knowledge forms the strong foundation for the entire course — whether you are a Class 5 student just starting with AI or a university student preparing for advanced projects. All explanations are written in simple, clear English so students from around the world can easily follow along. Each lesson is designed to be read in 10–20 minutes and includes examples you can try right now on free AI tools like ChatGPT, Grok, Gemini, or Claude.
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Prompt Engineering

Time to play! Open any free AI chatbot (ChatGPT, Grok, Gemini, or Claude) and try these experiments one by one. Write down or remember the differences in answers.

Experiment 1 – Length control Prompt A: “Tell me a joke about cats.” Prompt B: “Tell me one very short joke about cats (maximum 20 words).” → Notice how B forces a quick, punchy joke.

Experiment 2 – Tone change Prompt A: “Describe a rainy day.” Prompt B: “Describe a rainy day in a romantic way like a poet.” Prompt C: “Describe a rainy day in a scary horror story style.” → Same topic — completely different feelings!

Experiment 3 – Role play Prompt: “Act as a friendly science teacher. Explain why the sky is blue to a curious 8-year-old using easy words and one example.” → AI becomes your personal teacher!

Experiment 4 – Comparison Prompt: “Compare Grok and Gemini in 3 bullet points: strengths, weaknesses, and best use cases in 2026.” → AI gives you a quick summary to help choose your favorite tool.

Bonus challenge: Ask the same question to two different chatbots (e.g., ChatGPT and Claude). See how their personalities and answers differ slightly.

Do at least 5 experiments and notice: Small changes in your prompt = big changes in output. This is the magic of prompt engineering!