Install
openclaw skills install adaptive-socratic-questioning自适应苏格拉底式追问技能 / Adaptive Socratic Questioning - Use adaptive follow-up questioning to deepen student reasoning and uncover misconceptions. Use when the user n...
openclaw skills install adaptive-socratic-questioningAdaptive Socratic Questioning is an intelligent follow-up questioning skill focused on cultivating research thinking. It guides students to think deeply step by step through the Socratic method, fostering independent research capability, critical thinking, and innovative consciousness.
The Socratic method is not about simply giving answers, but through carefully designed question sequences, helping learners:
Automatically load this skill when users request help with research questions, academic discussions, or methodological guidance.
Determine:
Based on the analysis:
Create 3-7 questions following these rules:
Give specific, actionable guidance:
{
"followup_questions": [
{
"type": "explanation",
"question": "Why does [X] lead to [Y]?",
"purpose": "Probe understanding of the causal mechanism",
"level_adaptation": "Scaffolded for high school students"
},
{
"type": "evidence",
"question": "What evidence supports this conclusion?",
"purpose": "Teach claim justification",
"level_adaptation": "Accessible to all levels"
}
],
"reasoning_path": "Initial claim → Mechanism → Evidence → Application → Critique",
"misconception_flags": [
{
"misconception": "Students often think [X] when actually [Y]",
"severity": "high",
"addressed_by_questions": [1, 3]
}
],
"teacher_guidance": "Start with Q1. If the student struggles, provide a concrete example before Q2."
}
{
"concept": "Why does decreasing particle size improve battery rate performance?",
"student_response": "Because lithium ions diffuse faster",
"student_level": "university",
"learning_goal": "analyze"
}
{
"followup_questions": [
{
"type": "explanation",
"question": "Why does particle size affect lithium diffusion speed?",
"purpose": "Probe the underlying mechanism",
"level_adaptation": "University-level materials science terminology"
},
{
"type": "causality",
"question": "How does diffusion distance influence the electrochemical reaction kinetics?",
"purpose": "Connect structure to function",
"level_adaptation": "Requires understanding of diffusion equations"
},
{
"type": "counterexample",
"question": "If particles become extremely small (nanoscale), could new limitations emerge from surface effects?",
"purpose": "Explore boundaries of the principle",
"level_adaptation": "Advanced - considers nanoscale physics"
},
{
"type": "generalization",
"question": "Are there structural strategies to improve diffusion kinetics without reducing particle size?",
"purpose": "Encourage creative problem-solving",
"level_adaptation": "Research-level thinking"
}
],
"reasoning_path": "Initial observation → Diffusion mechanism → Kinetic implications → Boundary conditions → Alternative strategies",
"misconception_flags": [
{
"misconception": "Students often attribute rate improvement solely to 'faster diffusion' without considering the quantitative relationship between diffusion length and rate (Fick's laws)",
"severity": "medium",
"addressed_by_questions": [1, 2]
}
],
"teacher_guidance": "This question chain works best after students have been introduced to diffusion concepts. Pause after Q2 to ensure the student grasps the quantitative relationship before moving to Q3's counterexample."
}
This skill is grounded in well-established educational research:
Socratic Method: Ancient technique using systematic questioning to stimulate critical thinking and expose contradictions in student reasoning
Bloom's Taxonomy: Framework for cognitive development from recall through creation; our question progression maps to these levels
Metacognition: Flavell (1979) and subsequent research showing that thinking about thinking improves learning outcomes
Self-Explanation Effects: Chi et al. (1994) demonstrated that asking students to explain their reasoning dramatically improves understanding
Guided Questioning: King (1992) showed that strategic questioning outperforms passive reading for deep learning
Instructional Principles: Rosenshine (2012) identified questioning as a core principle of effective instruction
Asynchronous limitation: This skill doesn't see real-time student responses; it generates question chains based on a single response.
Cultural factors: Questioning approaches vary across cultures; what's appropriate in a Western classroom may be too direct in other contexts.
Time constraints: Generating 5-7 questions takes time; in practice, teachers may only have time for 2-3.
Subject expertise: The skill relies on the teacher's domain knowledge to judge whether questions are accurate and appropriate.
MIT-0 - See LICENSE file for details.