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Feynman Tutor AI Learning Mode: practical guide

A practical guide to using Feynman Tutor on inspir for thinking learning, with prompts, study loops, and safer AI habits.

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Feynman Tutor AI Learning Mode is a focused way to use AI for learning instead of passive answer collection. The mode is built around a specific job: Try explaining a concept simply. Your tutor spots gaps, asks questions, and helps you rebuild the explanation.

That focus matters. A general chatbot can answer almost anything, but a learning mode gives the conversation a shape. It nudges you toward the kind of thinking, practice, feedback, or exploration that helps the idea stick.

What this mode helps with

Learners exploring thinking topics who want practical guidance instead of a generic answer box.

Use Feynman Tutor when you want a session that starts quickly but still adapts to you. The first goal is not to sound impressive. The first goal is to make the next step feel possible.

This mode is especially useful for learners who want to:

  • Explain it simply until it sticks.
  • Start with example prompts.
  • Adapt the session to your goal.

Why it is different from a generic chatbot

This mode is tuned for feynman tutor with its own prompts, examples, and learning flow.

That difference shows up in the flow. Instead of one giant response, the best sessions move through a loop: set a goal, try something, get feedback, repair the weak spot, and choose the next action.

Prompts to try

  • "I'll explain gravity"
  • "Test my understanding of inflation"
  • "Help me simplify recursion"

You can also start with a rough version of your real problem. A messy first prompt is fine. The session can clarify the level, audience, deadline, and style once you begin.

A stronger study loop

  1. Tell the mode what you are trying to learn or produce.
  2. Ask for a small first step rather than a final answer.
  3. Try the step in your own words.
  4. Ask the AI to check your reasoning, not just the result.
  5. Finish by writing the idea back from memory.

This is the same habit behind studying with AI without cheating yourself: keep the learner active. AI is most useful when it gives you feedback on your thinking.

Where to go next

Start the live mode at Feynman Tutor. If you want a neighboring learning format, try Case Study Simulator. For a broader view of the platform, read what an AI learning companion should do for everyone.

Field guide

How to turn this guide into active learning

Feynman Tutor AI Learning Mode: practical guide is designed to be used, not just read. The best next step is to move from the article into a specific learning job: open Feynman Tutor, give it context, answer before asking for the solution, and use the feedback to decide what to review next.

When Feynman Tutor is the right next step

Feynman Tutor fits this article because it is built for thinking learning, not generic chat. Learners exploring thinking topics who want practical guidance instead of a generic answer box.

Inside the live mode, the core job is: Use the Feynman technique to reveal gaps and simplify understanding.. That focus keeps the session pointed at progress instead of another long explanation.

  • Explain it simply until it sticks
  • Start with example prompts
  • Adapt the session to your goal

A stronger first prompt

A weak prompt only names a topic. A strong prompt names the topic, the level, the sticking point, and the kind of help you want. Use this guide as the context, then ask the mode to make you do something with it.

The session should follow this loop: Identify gaps, ask clarifying questions, rebuild the explanation, and retry.. If the AI skips straight to the finish, ask it to slow down and check your reasoning first.

  • Start with "I'll explain gravity", then add what you already know and where you are stuck.
  • Start with "Test my understanding of inflation", then add what you already know and where you are stuck.
  • Start with "Help me simplify recursion", then add what you already know and where you are stuck.

Checks that keep the learning honest

Good output for this mode should feel usable: Use simple-language rewrites and gap checklists.. If the response is too broad, ask for one example, one misconception, or one check question.

Before leaving the article, prove that the idea is yours. Write a short recap from memory, answer a fresh question, or explain the concept to an imaginary beginner without copying the AI's phrasing.

  • Did you answer at least one question before reading the correction?
  • Can you explain the main idea without looking back at the article?
  • Do you know which route to use next: a mode, prompt, subject hub, or related guide?
Active study loop

A 12-minute Feynman Tutor practice loop

Use "Feynman Tutor AI Learning Mode: practical guide" as a launchpad, not a stopping point. The strongest learning session moves from reading into recall, feedback, and one visible next step.

  1. 01
    Name the learning job

    Write one sentence that says what you want to understand, remember, decide, or produce after reading this guide.

  2. 02
    Open Feynman Tutor

    Use the live mode and paste your goal, a paragraph from the article, or the part that still feels fuzzy. Ask for one small task before asking for a full explanation.

  3. 03
    Make the AI test your thinking

    Ask for a misconception check, a short retrieval question, or a harder example. Answer before asking the AI to correct you.

  4. 04
    Close with proof

    Finish by writing a five-bullet recap from memory, then ask for the one weak spot to review tomorrow.

Before you leave the guide

  • Can you explain the main idea without looking back at the article?
  • Could you handle a starter prompt like "I'll explain gravity" with less help than before?
  • Did the AI check your reasoning instead of simply replacing it?
  • Do you have a next route open: a mode, subject hub, workflow, or related guide?
Practice map

Turn this guide into a learning route.

The article is only the starting point. These public routes connect the idea to a live mode, subject hub, study path, or workflow.

Live learning mode

Continue in Feynman Tutor

Try explaining a concept simply. Your tutor spots gaps, asks questions, and helps you rebuild the explanation.

Open Feynman Tutor