Classroom Presentation Prop Checklist

Create a one-page classroom presentation prop, handout, backup, transport, and door-check checklist without collecting student names, grades, or sensitive school records.

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openclaw skills install classroom-presentation-prop-checklist

Classroom Presentation Prop Checklist

Purpose

Use this prompt-only skill when a user needs to prepare physical props, handouts, demo materials, display items, backup supplies, and a transport plan for a classroom presentation. The deliverable is a one-page checklist for the night before, the morning of, and the classroom setup moment.

This skill is for logistics and materials only. It must not collect or expose student names, grades, IDs, medical details, disciplinary information, private school records, or sensitive classroom data.

Safety Boundary

Do not ask for or include student names, grades, report-card data, identification numbers, school account details, teacher private contact details, health information, disability records, disciplinary records, or any sensitive school record. Use neutral labels such as presenter, group member, slide owner, or helper if roles are needed.

Do not write the academic content of the presentation unless the user asks for a brief materials-focused outline. Keep the core output about props, handouts, backups, timing, transport, and setup.

Core Principles

  • Make presentation materials easy to find and carry.
  • Separate must-have props from nice-to-have extras.
  • Include backups for common failures such as dead markers, missing tape, or a failed file.
  • Keep the checklist private and free of sensitive student data.
  • Help the user pack in a calm, visible order.
  • End with a short final door check.

Required Inputs

Ask only for practical logistics details:

  • Presentation topic or short project label, without student names.
  • Presentation format: poster, slides, speech, demonstration, model, experiment display, skit, reading, or show-and-tell.
  • Location type: classroom, auditorium, science room, library, gym, or online classroom with physical props nearby.
  • Main prop categories: model, poster, display board, printed visuals, costume piece, sample object, demo tool, handouts, or cue cards.
  • Allowed and not allowed items if known, such as liquids, food, sharp objects, electronics, animals, or messy materials.
  • Transport method: backpack, tote, poster tube, car, bus, bike, or walking.
  • Time available for packing and setup.
  • Backup needs: printed copy, USB drive, charger, tape, spare markers, batteries, labels, or a photo of the project.

If the user is unsure, create a generic classroom-safe checklist and mark items to confirm with the teacher.

Workflow

  1. Define presentation parts. Break the presentation into intro, main demonstration, visual display, handout moment, and closing if helpful.
  2. List required props. Record every physical item needed for each part.
  3. Separate roles without personal data. Use anonymous role labels only when the checklist needs coordination.
  4. Check classroom rules. Flag items to confirm if they may be messy, noisy, fragile, sharp, electronic, scented, food-related, or hard to transport.
  5. Add backups. Include low-risk backups such as printed notes, tape, spare marker, batteries, charger, rubber bands, zip bags, or a photo of the setup.
  6. Build the transport kit. Choose containers and padding so props arrive intact and are easy to unpack.
  7. Make the setup order. Put items in the order they will come out in class.
  8. Run the night-before check. Confirm all props, handouts, files, chargers, and containers are ready.
  9. Run the door check. Create a final thirty-second list for leaving home or entering school.

Output Format

Return a one-page classroom presentation prop checklist with these sections:

  1. Presentation Snapshot
    • Topic or project label
    • Format
    • Location type
    • Date or presentation window if provided
    • Privacy note: no student names or grades included
  2. Must-Have Props
    • Item
    • Presentation part
    • Packed yes or no
    • Fragile or special handling note
  3. Handouts and Visuals
    • Posters, display board, cue cards, printed visuals, diagrams, or handouts
    • Copy count if the user provides it
    • Folder or envelope location
  4. Demo and Setup Supplies
    • Tape, markers, scissors if allowed, labels, clips, batteries, charger, stand, pointer, wipes, or bags
    • Confirm-with-teacher items
  5. Backup Plan
    • Printed notes
    • Digital backup if allowed
    • Photo of project
    • Spare batteries or charger
    • Emergency tape or marker
  6. Transport Plan
    • Container
    • Padding
    • Carry method
    • Weather protection
    • What stays upright or flat
  7. Classroom Setup Order
    • First item out
    • Display position
    • Props in use order
    • Cleanup items
  8. Night-Before Checklist
    • Pack props
    • Pack visuals
    • Charge electronics if used
    • Place by door
    • Confirm allowed items
  9. Final Door Check
    • Poster or display
    • Props
    • Notes
    • Handouts
    • Backup
    • Water or personal comfort item if allowed

Example Prompts

  • "My kid has a science fair presentation tomorrow with a display board, model volcano, and handouts. Build a prop checklist with transport plan and final door check."
  • "I'm giving a classroom book report with poster, cue cards, and a costume piece. Create a night-before packing list, backup plan, and setup order for the morning."
  • "Our group is doing a history presentation with maps, printed visuals, and a short skit. Make a prop checklist that separates each person's items without using names, just roles."

Quality Bar

A strong result feels like a calm night-before packing sheet for a school presentation. It should prevent forgotten props and classroom setup stress while avoiding student names, grades, school records, private identifiers, and unnecessary academic or personal data.