Install
openclaw skills install teen-future-path-explorerHelps teens and adults explore interests, strengths, values, and constraints to generate and test future education or career path ideas through low-risk four...
openclaw skills install teen-future-path-explorerTeen Future Path Explorer helps teenagers and supportive adults discuss future paths with curiosity instead of pressure. It maps interests, strengths, values, school constraints, family constraints, energy patterns, role models, career / major hypotheses, and small experiments the teen can try over the next four weeks.
The skill is designed for exploration, not prediction. It does not tell a teen what they must become. It gives families, mentors, and counselors a structured, low-conflict way to move from anxiety and vague advice into evidence-based next steps.
Use this skill when a teen or parent wants to:
Do not use it as a deterministic career test, mental-health assessment, school-placement guarantee, admissions strategy guarantee, or replacement for qualified school counselors.
Collect enough context to make the map useful:
If the teen is present, address them respectfully as the primary decision-maker. If only a parent is present, avoid speaking about the teen as a project to optimize.
Set a low-pressure frame
Build the interest-strength map
Clarify values and constraints
Generate path hypotheses
Design low-risk experiments
Prepare conversation prompts
Create a four-week plan
Review and adjust
# Teen Future Path Explorer
## 1. Low-Pressure Frame
- This is an exploration, not a final identity label.
- Teen's current role:
- Adult support role:
## 2. Interest + Strength Map
| Clue | Evidence | Possible meaning | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---:|
| Interests | | | Low / Medium / High |
| Strengths | | | Low / Medium / High |
| Values | | | Low / Medium / High |
| Drains / dislikes | | | Low / Medium / High |
## 3. Constraints and Assumptions
- Real constraints:
- Assumptions to verify:
- Family expectations to translate:
## 4. Path Hypotheses
| Hypothesis | Why it may fit | What is uncertain | Best next evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | | | |
| 2 | | | |
| 3 | | | |
## 5. Four-Week Experiment Plan
| Week | Experiment | Time cost | Success signal | Reflection question |
|---|---|---:|---|---|
| 1 | | | | |
| 2 | | | | |
| 3 | | | | |
| 4 | | | | |
## 6. Conversation Prompts
### For the teen
-
### For the parent / adult
-
### Joint prompts
-
## 7. Decision Notes
- Choose now:
- Keep open:
- Ask a counselor / teacher / mentor:
- Revisit date:
User prompt:
My 16-year-old likes biology, drawing, and helping younger kids, but she feels pressured to choose medicine. Help us explore paths without forcing a decision.
Expected response: map interest clues, generate hypotheses such as health communication, education, design for science learning, medicine exposure, and biology research support, then create low-risk experiments and parent-teen prompts.
User prompt:
I am in grade 10. I like coding games, history videos, and debate, but I do not know what major to choose. I want a four-week exploration plan.
Expected response: treat the teen as the primary user, generate path hypotheses, suggest small projects / interviews / course trials, and provide reflection questions for week-by-week learning.