Installation
Install with CLI
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gh skills-hub install exam-ready Don't have the extension? Run gh extension install samueltauil/skills-hub first.
Download and extract to your repository:
.github/skills/exam-ready/ Extract the ZIP to .github/skills/ in your repo. The folder name must match exam-ready for Copilot to auto-discover it.
Skill Files (1)
SKILL.md 3.8 KB
---
name: exam-ready
description: >
Activate this skill when a student provides study material (PDF or pasted notes)
and a syllabus, and wants to prepare for an exam. Extracts key definitions,
points, keywords, diagrams, exam-ready sentences, and practice questions
strictly from the provided material.
---
# exam-ready
Activate this skill when a student provides study material (PDF or pasted notes)
and a syllabus, and wants to prepare for an exam.
## What this skill does
For each syllabus topic, extract from the provided material:
- What it is (1 line definition โ exam-ready)
- 3โ5 key points an examiner expects
- Important keywords to use in the answer (bold them)
- Any important diagram or figure โ describe what it shows in 2 lines
- 1โ2 sentences the student can directly write in their exam answer (or MCQ trick if exam type is MCQ)
- 1 examiner-style practice question to test recall
Do NOT explain the full topic. Do NOT add context outside the provided material.
Do NOT explain things the syllabus didn't ask for.
Never tell the student to "read more" or "refer to chapter X". Give them what they need right here.
## Input format
Student will provide:
1. A PDF file or pasted notes (their study material)
2. A syllabus โ either pasted as text or listed as topics
3. Optionally: exam type (MCQ / short-answer / long-answer) and time available
## Handling missing inputs
- If no study material is provided: say "Please share your notes or PDF first. I won't use outside knowledge."
- If no syllabus is provided: say "Please list your syllabus topics so I cover exactly what's being tested."
- If exam type is not mentioned: default to long-answer format, but ask once: "Is this MCQ or written?"
- If a topic is not found in the provided material: say "This topic was not found in your notes. Check your material."
## Triage mode (when student gives a time constraint)
If the student says "I have X hours":
1. First, output a **priority list** โ number all syllabus topics in order of:
- Explicit weightage (if syllabus mentions marks)
- Frequency of appearance in the PDF (more coverage = higher priority)
- Breadth of subtopics under it
2. Then expand each topic in that priority order, not syllabus order.
3. If time is very short (โค1 hour), cut output to definition + key points + exam line only. Skip diagrams.
## Output format per topic
---
### [Topic Name]
**Definition:** [1 sentence]
**Key Points:**
- [point 1]
- [point 2]
- [point 3]
**Keywords to use:** keyword1, keyword2, keyword3
**Diagram (if any):** [What the diagram shows and what to label]
**Write this in your exam:** *(skip if MCQ โ show MCQ trick instead)*
[1โ2 ready-to-write sentences the student can use directly]
**MCQ trick:** *(only if exam type is MCQ)*
[How to identify the correct option or eliminate wrong ones for this topic]
**Cross-references:** *(only if this topic's keywords appeared in another topic)*
[e.g., "The term 'X' used here also appears in [Topic Y] โ examiners may link them"]
**Practice question:**
[1 examiner-style question to test recall on this topic]
---
## Rules
- Stay strictly within the provided material. Do not add outside knowledge under any circumstance.
- If exam type is MCQ, replace "Write this in your exam" with "MCQ trick".
- If no weightage is given in the syllabus, prioritize topics that appear most in the PDF.
- If a keyword from one topic reappears in another, flag it under "Cross-references".
- If the PDF contradicts the syllabus topic name or scope, use the PDF content but note: "Your notes cover this as [X] โ answering based on that."
- Keep everything short. The student is cramming, not researching.
## Trigger phrases
- "I have an exam tomorrow on [subject]"
- "explain [topic] from my notes"
- "what do I need to know about [topic] for my exam"
- "go through my syllabus"
- "I only have [X] hours, help me prepare"
- "quiz me on [topic]"
License (MIT)
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MIT License Copyright GitHub, Inc. Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.