No-BS ChatGPT: aprende cualquier habilidad más rápido con ChatGPT | Ronny Hermosa | Skillshare
Search

Playback Speed


1.0x


  • 0.5x
  • 0.75x
  • 1x (Normal)
  • 1.25x
  • 1.5x
  • 1.75x
  • 2x

No-BS ChatGPT: Learn Any Skill Faster with ChatGPT

teacher avatar Ronny Hermosa, Your Go-To Canva Guru

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      Intro S04 No BS ChatGPT Final

      2:10

    • 2.

      Extract Key Insights from Books

      13:46

    • 3.

      Learn Anything from YouTube, Wikipedia & Blogs

      20:47

    • 4.

      Learn the Basics of Any Language Faster

      25:10

    • 5.

      Design Personalized Learning Plans

      16:51

    • 6.

      Get Tutored on Any Subject

      19:27

    • 7.

      Prep for Tests and Exams

      14:08

  • --
  • Beginner level
  • Intermediate level
  • Advanced level
  • All levels

Community Generated

The level is determined by a majority opinion of students who have reviewed this class. The teacher's recommendation is shown until at least 5 student responses are collected.

374

Students

--

Projects

About This Class

Discover a new way to learn with ChatGPT! 

In this second class of my NO-BS ChatGPT Series, I'll show you how to accelerate your learning using ChatGPT. Together, we'll delve into leveraging smart, effective prompts to master any skill quickly!

Hey there, I'm Ronny!

I’m a Canva Verified Expert™, and an AI enthusiast (to say the least). After a fulfilling 2-year journey at Canva, I embarked on an adventure as a full-time content creator alongside my wife, Diana. Together, we've nurtured a 460K-strong YouTube community and built a thriving six-figure education business.

My fascination with generative AI tools, and particularly with ChatGPT, began in 2023. Discovering their capabilities was a game-changer, sparking a journey to integrate these tools into our creative workflow. My team and I have dedicated ourselves to not only mastering these tools, but also teaching our audience how to leverage them to their full potential.

I truly believe that ChatGPT has the potential to revolutionize education, making it accessible to anyone, anywhere on the planet, at almost no cost. All you need is the right set of prompts!

So, whether you’re a student seeking private tutoring, contemplating a professional shift, or simply eager to learn something new, this class will provide you with the essential ChatGPT prompts to rapidly master any skill.


Here's what you'll learn in this class:

  • How to extract key insights from any book with ChatGPT
  • How to use ChatGPT to gain knowledge from online resources like YouTube, Blogs or Wikipedia
  • How to learn the basics of any language with the right ChatGPT prompts
  • How to craft personalized learning paths to learn anything at your own pace
  • How to turn ChatGPT intro your private tutor

Plus, I'm giving you access to my bonus prompt guide, which contains all the prompts I use in the class. The prompt guide allows you to copy/paste each prompt and therefore save a bunch of time!

No previous prompting experience is required, you can simply come in and enjoy the class.

You will need access to Open AI’s ChatGPT and you can absolutely follow the class without a ChatGPT Plus subscription (that’s the paid subscription).

Join the class with an open mind and a list of skills you've always wanted to acquire—you’ll be amazed how ChatGPT can help you learn them faster!

Here's Class 01 of the Series (in case you skipped it):

Meet Your Teacher

Teacher Profile Image

Ronny Hermosa

Your Go-To Canva Guru

Top Teacher
Level: All Levels

Class Ratings

Expectations Met?
    Exceeded!
  • 0%
  • Yes
  • 0%
  • Somewhat
  • 0%
  • Not really
  • 0%

Why Join Skillshare?

Take award-winning Skillshare Original Classes

Each class has short lessons, hands-on projects

Your membership supports Skillshare teachers

Learn From Anywhere

Take classes on the go with the Skillshare app. Stream or download to watch on the plane, the subway, or wherever you learn best.

Transcripts

1. Intro S04 No BS ChatGPT Final: Welcome back to your NoBS C GPT series where I go straight to the point and discover practical ways to actually get things done with C GPT. In this part two of the series, we'll focus on acquiring new skills, and I'll show you how you can learn anything quickly and for free by using the right Ch GPT prompts. Whether you are looking to freshen up on school stuff. Pick up some new skills for career switch or just feed that curiosity bug of yours. Cha GPT is the perfect companion to learn anything faster and acquire new skills at no cost. In this class, I'll show you my favorite prompts to unlock Cha GPTs vast knowledge and shortcut the learning process across any topic or subject area. Hey, guys, my name is Ronnie Hermosa, and I am a Tuber educator and an entrepreneur. Today's class is about understanding how Ch GPT is transforming education and the way we acquire new skills. It's about gaining access to the entirety of the world's knowledge, no matter where you are on the planet and this. For free. What would you do if you suddenly found yourself with access to limitless knowledge? And how would you leverage that knowledge to make money or advance your career. We'll cover all that and more in this class. Each lesson will tackle a specific aspect of education, whether it's learning from books, online resources, or even learning a new language. I'll share with you my best proms for learning, but also show you how to use them effectively. I'll demonstrate how to use CH GPT as your personal tutor and learn by chatating with it, and we'll also explore creating personalized learning path, as well as tailored tests and exams to assess what you've learned There's no particular requirement for you to be able to follow this class. However, I recommend you check out the first class of the No BS C GPT series if you haven't watched it yet. It's titled the basics in 1 hour. Now, if you are already familiar with C GPT, then you're good to go and I'll see you in the class. 2. Extract Key Insights from Books: Wouldn't it be incredible if we could access the content available in all the books out there. How much time do you need to read a book anyway? A week, a month? That is quite a bit of time. This is often because books are filled with a bunch of fluff that surrounds only a few key ideas. So in this lecture, we will explore proms for C GPT that will help us identify these key points in any book, significantly reducing the time required to access, but also to utilize the information contained in these books. My goal for this lecture is to show you how to use C GPT to quickly summarize key ideas and takeaways from books, but also help you digest the knowledge from these books. Here are a few things the lecture we cover. We'll see how to get summary from any book in our desired length and format. We'll also go deeper with follow a prompts and explore important concepts and chapters from these books. We'll have Ch GPT explain how to apply the knowledge contained in the books to specific situations. And finally, we'll ask for real life applications of the main teachings of the books. All right, guys, I am here in Chat GPT. And I'm using the 3.5 version, though, I have access to GPT four, but for the sake of this course, and using something everybody has access to. I'm going to be using 3.5. Alright, so my first prompt in order to learn from books is going to be this one right here. Do you know the book die with zero by Bill Perkins? Okay, so I'm going to just check if Chat GPT knows about that book. Immediately, yes, die with zero is a book by Bill Perkins, published in 2020. In the book, Perkins challenges the traditional notion of saving all of one's money for retirement and purpose is a different approach to financial planning blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Okay. So the good news is that CGPT knows the book. So my kind of like prepping, my priming of CGPT is complete. Now I can start asking questions about the book. And I'm going to be using this prompt right here to ask my first question. Please summarize the main ideas and key insights from the book. Use formatting to highlight each insight and follow with a one paragraph explanation of that idea. Do not keep any important ideas from the Alright, so here, I'm just simply asking C GPT to summarize the main ideas, and to clearly highlight them by using formatting. So very quickly, C GPT gives me here six bullet points, more six main ideas, key ideas followed by the one paragraph explanation. Okay, so rethinking retirement planning, the importance of time, allocation, the concept of lifespan financial planning, maximizing happiness units over lifetime, re evaluating legacy, planning, creating a personalized financial blueprint. So for having read the book die with zero, I could say that these are indeed some of the key ideas. Now, I couldn't say if these are all or the most important key ideas from the book. But definitely these are ideas that are important for the book. So, followed by these main ideas, these key ideas is a little paragraph. So in traditional retirement planning, the focus is on saving as much money as possible to ensure financial security in old age. Perkins challenges this approach by suggesting that people should consider spending more, of their money earlier in life to maximize enjoyment and experiences while they are younger and healthier. So this summarizes the book pretty well already this first paragraph right here. I'm not going to read all the different main idea explanations here, but I just wanted to show you that this is a very simple way to scan through a book which is over 200 pages long. I read the entire book. It took me about two weeks to read this book, normal pace. I was reading 20 some pages per day. But Yeah, so I could just really go through the entire book and its main ideas in what? In 10 minutes if I read this and take time to really digest this information. Alright, so this is great. I can summarize book and have an overview of what's inside of them very quickly. But how can I go deeper? Like, what can I do? How can I leverage this information? This next prompt right here. Let me show it to you. Sticking only to what's written in the book. What are some actions we can take to maximize happiness units over a lifetime, right? So this prompt is basically trying to dig deeper on point number four from the previous answer right here, maximizing happiness unit. Over a lifetime. If you're not completely clear, what that means. Well, I can try, force GPT to use only the knowledge contained in the book, what's written in the book to explain that to me. Okay? So here we are. I have here eight different bullet points, again, still with a little bit of explanation for each of them, giving us some actions we can take to maximize happiness units over our lifetime. Okay? So the first one, prioritize experiences over material possessions. Invest in learning and growth, cultivate meaningful relationships, practice gratitude and mindfulness, set meaningful goals and pursue them, embrace adventure and exploration, practice self care and well being, give back and make a positive impact. So these are eight different concepts or actions that are actually described in the book, not exactly in those terms, but I think what CGPT does here because it doesn't really actually read the It doesn't have access to everything that is written in the book. It knows the book because of the content that has been created around the book that is available online. So knowing that we have to understand that these are already a re interpretation, and it's always good to check the accuracy of this information. But from having read the book, I could say that these are indeed some actions that are suggested in the book. Now, word for word, I don't think so because again, CGPT doesn't have access to the actual book. This was great. And moving on, I want to show you something else you could do when prompting Cha JPT to learn from different books. What I did here is to ask for a pretty extensive or comprehensive summary of the book. But you could also prompt for a much shorter summary of the book, for example, using this prompt right here. Summarize the book in one paragraph, less than 280 characters and use relevant emojis. So here, I'm giving C GPT a very specific task to summarize the book in only one paragraph and also a maximum number of characters, but also forcing it to use relevant emojis. So let's try again. So here it is, my summary in only one paragraph, die with zero by Bill Perkins, challenges traditional retirement planning, advocating for maximizing life experiences over accumulating wealth and money bag mog. It suggests allocating resources to enjoy adventures, learning, and relationships throughout life, prioritizing happiness units over financial savings, star EOG. Perkins urges readers to rethink legacy planning and embrace a personalized approach to financial and experiential fulfillment, aiming to live a rich and fulfilling life without regrets and rocket emoji. That's an interesting choice of emoji. The money bag was really spot on. The star, yes, in the rocket. Yeah, maybe. But I mean, it's cool. This is a one paragraph summary. And I could say again, for having read the book. That's why I chose this book, so I could double check on the information. This is a very accurate summary, short summary of the book. So Well done. Yeah, I'm pretty happy with this experiment. Alright, now, let me show you my favorite way of prompting CGPit and learn from books. Now that we have summarized the book, we understand it's key concept, it's key ideas. We have a good understanding. After playing around with CajPit for maybe 10 minutes of what's inside the book, I want CajPit to help me leverage that knowledge from the book to improve my personal life. Okay. So I'm going to give it a prompt that will explain kind of pretty much precisely how it could help me with the knowledge from the book to improve my life. So the prompt I'm going to use for that is slightly longer. It's a one shot learning prompt. So with one example, let me read it to you. Can you suggest five to ten practical ways I could apply the knowledge from this book in my daily life. Make your recommendation realistic, actionable. I'll give it an example. The following. For example, for the part of the book that speaks about embracing adventure and exploration, you could say, opening, keep a running list of things you want to experience like places to visit, food to eat, or art and culture you want to discover, sports you want to try, et, and make some time every weekend to revisit this list and schedule activities based on its items. That is my full prompt. I'm going to run it and see what happens. So I asked GPT to explore a specific part of the book. So this one right here point number six, embrace adventure and exploration. So I want to dig deeper here. I wanted to give me some things I can apply in my daily life. All right, so certainly, here are five practical ways to apply the knowledge from died zero in your daily life. Number one, create a bucket list. Number two, Prioritize experiences over things. Number three, schedule regular adventures. Number four, invest in learning and growth, five practice gratitude in mindfulness, six, embrace meaningful relationships. He told me that he gave me five, but it actually gave me more. I gave me eight. Embrace meaningful relationships, set financial goals with experiences in mind, and explore new hobbies and interests. So here we went a little bit off track, I would say, because I asked it to specifically give me some things I can do to embrace adventure and exploration. That is accurate. Actually. Like, that could answer my actual prompt, because I ask it for things I can do in my practical life. And it does make sense because it gave me some actual pieces of advice I could apply in my life. When faced with a decision to spend money, prioritize experiences that bring joy and fulfillment over material possessions. Allocate funds towards activities like traveling, dining out with friends, or attending events rather than unnecessary purchases. I am satisfied with this answer because it gave me some practical ways I could apply the knowledge of the book in my life here, telling me, go to a restaurant instead of buying some stuff you don't need. That is quite generic, but that is indeed knowledge from the book. I believe these proms give us a strong base to work with. They allow me to get straight to the point, access the knowledge in books without having to read them, but also start leveraging this knowledge in situations that are relevant to me. Now, I'm not telling you you should stop reading books. Books have been around for hundreds of years, and they are an invaluable resource. There's nothing like taking a trip to your local library or entering a well furnished bookshop. On top of that, using Ch GPT to summarize books presents a few limitations. Indeed, summaries may miss nuances or lack the full context of the Also, CGPT cannot access the actual content of the books. It relies on what other people have been saying or the content they have been producing about these books that can be found on the open web. Similarly, CGPT will not be able to extract specific quotes nor to pinpoint page numbers in the books. Also, and obviously, the insights that we will get will still heavily depend on the original content quality. AKA is the original book any good. Now, considering all of that, I believe it is still important to read the full primary source or the full original text in these books. And this is very important. You should always verify that the information CGPT provides is accurate. My, guys, let me wrap up this lecture by pointing you to a specific video I created for our YouTube channel in which I show you how to remember everything you read in books with CGPT and Canva. If you'd like to watch that, I will have a link to this video in this lectures description. 3. Learn Anything from YouTube, Wikipedia & Blogs: What we just did for books in the previous lecture can also be done for all types of digital content found on the Internet. In this lecture, we will explore how to use a specific set of props to extract and organize high quality information from platforms like YouTube, wikipedia, and niche blogs that you can find online. But that's not all. We will also ask GPT to create personalized learning path for us. That will let us learn what truly matters to us at our own So here is a quick overview of what's to come in this lecture. First, we'll see how we can ask CGPT to summarize key points from any YouTube video, so we can learn faster. Next, we'll have CGPT synthesize Wikipedia pages into concise overviews. We'll see how to create summaries of blog posts and online articles and see how we can efficiently extract their key ideas. We'll ask C GPT to critique online material and highlight strength and weaknesses. And then towards the end of the lecture, we'll see how we can get CPT to build custom learning playlist for us so that we can learn exactly what we need in the time we have available. Alright, so again, I am here on the starting page of Chachi PT. And the first thing I'm going to prompt is I want to figure out what are the important skills that I should be learning about today. And I'm going to be using this prompt right here. What are ten skills that are really hot right now and will help me make lots of money. Okay? So I want to focus on high paying skills. And this is what CGPT will be recommending that I learn. So, it starts like this. Sure, here are ten skills that are currently in demand because the demand will set the value and have the potential to help you make good income. Number one, data science and analytics. Number two, software development, number three, artificial intelligence and machine learning. Number four, digital marketing, number five, cybersecurity, number six, blockchain development, number seven, Cloud computing, eight UI UX design, nine sales and negotiation, and ten project management. So these are according to Ch GPT, some highly demanded skills that will pretty much if you start learning them, generate a good income for you. Now, this is great because it gives me some direction. If I have no idea where to start, knowing that you could learn pretty much anything you want thanks to this tool is both a blessing and a curse. There's so much choice that you might be paralyzed by what should I decide? What should I learn? So this prompt kind of helps us see it through, like, understanding, okay, this is what the job market is searching for. So maybe if I learn one of these skills, if I go deeper, at least, I could expect to make some good income All right. So I'm going to be focusing on cyber security and keep prompting further to see how far we can go, how much we can learn about cybersecurity with Chachi Pit. Alright, so my next step right here, now that I have chosen a particular a high demand skill that I know I want to learn more about. I'm going to head over to YouTube, and from here, simply run a simple search on cyber security. Okay, so I'm going to run that search, and I'm going to filter this by video. Start seeing if there is a video here that could be both like a video with a lot of views that would give me kind of feel of, this is a video that a lot of people have watched, so therefore, it must be good. So this one right here caught my attention. Cybersecurity, crash course, computer science. Crash course is kind of what I need right now. Like, I don't know much about cybersecurity. So maybe this video could really help me. So I have the video right here. Cybersecurity crash course. What I want to show you is that you can actually grab the transcript of this video. If you unfold this description and you scroll all the way to the end, you should see transcript. Okay? So you can click on Show transcript, and YouTube will be opening up the transcript right here. This little three Hamburger menu, will allow you to toggle the timestamps. So I will toggle the timestamps so you don't have the entire thing here, and I will just select everything and hold my click to make sure I have selected the entire text right here. So, right click copy this, and I'm going to head back over to Chat GPT, right here. And I'm going to be using this transcript. I'm going to be pasting the entire transcript right here in the box and come back to the beginning Click in the beginning of the first word, hold my shift key, enter two times, and I'm going to be using this prompt right here. Based on this YouTube video transcript on cybersecurity, summarize all the key points in bullet points. Use as many bullet points as they are important points in the video. So I say that the last part of the prompt because Typically, CGPit tends to stop at eight bullet points, you know, so I don't want the number of bullet points to be guided by what typically CJ PT does, but by the actual number of ideas in this transcript. So I'm going to run this script. It's a pretty long script. As long as you are trying to copy the script of a video which is shorter than 15 to 20 minutes, you should be fine. But if it's a very long video like a two hour video, you won't have enough characters in the contextual window of CGPT at least the free version to paste everything there. So there you go. I have my answer, introduction by Carian on the crash course of computer science. Explanation of the importance of cyber security in the interconnected world. Computers lack ethics and can be used for both good and malicious purposes, Caron of cyber security to the Jedi order, bringing peace and justice to the cyber verse. Okay. That's interesting. Then I have all of these different points right here that help me summarize the information, I would say that I can find in this cybersecurity crash course. So if I read this, I could actually understand and have a bird's eye view of topics that cybersecurity touches on, okay? So this saved me the 12, 13 minutes of this YouTube video. You could do that with any YouTube video really. If you don't want to watch it all, you can just summarize it with a similar prompt. So, this was a pretty interesting exercise to have like this video transform into bullet points because it gave me some things I could bounce off, really? Like, explanation of the bell a Padula model for access control. I have no idea what the bell a Padula model is, but I could prompt further. Like, if you want to dig deeper, I could simply follow up with a prompt like this. Explain what the bell Lapadula model is in simple terms. So I can start learning in this way. The Bell Lapadula model is a way to control access to information in computer systems, especially in environments where secrecy is crucial, like military or government settings. So there you go. You have your explanation of anything really related to the topic. So you can decide to go this way, like, start with a piece of information and then break it down, follow up with questions because CJPits here and can be used as your personalized tutor. Okay? So it could be used as a teacher that is always right there by your side. You can ask it any question. Or we could learn in a more structured way, okay, which is what we are going to do now. Now, that was me starting from a YouTube video, but you could start asking and prompting CGPT based on another resource you might have come across online. So it could be a Wikipedia page, could be a blog article, could be something you've seen on social media that leads to a specific resource or a paper, even, like a PDF. That would work as well. So, Now, let me show you a similar way of working. But this time with a Wikipedia page, and this one has a twist because it will be a very long page, so I cannot just grab everything and paste it here. And I believe Wikipedia is a strong resource on the Internet because it's open sourced, but also because it's pretty complete contains a lot of information. So if you want to learn about a specific topic, it is a good place to start, but there is sometimes a lot of information. So let's head over to Wikipedia. And I'm going to type cybersecurity enter Computer Security. Yeah, cybersecurity or computer security. And you see, all of this information right here. I'm not going to include all of the sources, but I'm going to copy everything from here, which is a lot of information. Now, if I copy this and simply come back to CG PT and paste that information in the window. Okay, that's a lot of information. Come all the way back to the top. And then write a simple prompt saying, summarize this Wikipedia page on cybersecurity into a two to three paragraph overview, of the main ideas. I'm not sure this is going to work. So if I run this prompt, you see an error was generated. The message you submitted was too long. Please reload the conversation and submit something shorter. Alright? So this is because we hit the limit of characters in the conceptual window or this window that I had to paste my information for CGPT 3.5. Now, there are other models out there with larger contextual windows. But right now for C GPT 3.5, this article was too long. So there is a way around this. Let me show you a simple website that will allow you to chop your information into several blocks of information that you can paste into CT GPT. So let me show you that website. And I will have a link to the website in the description of this lecture so you can find it there. It's called Chat GPT prompt splitter. Okay. So I'm going to go back to my Wikipedia page. Copy all the information again, and I'm going to paste it here. All right. So as soon as you paste it, it gives you the total amount of characters, and the button will indicate how many parts it should be cut into. Okay? So now, I'm going to split it into seven parts. All right, so there you go. It has created my seven parts, represented by the seven green rectangle right here. And you can simply copy the first one by clicking on that first part right here. And you see some custom instructions have been created four C GPT. It goes like this. The total length of the content that I want to send you is too large to send it in one piece. For sending you that content, I will follow this rule. Start part one out of ten. This is the content of part one out of ten in total of part ten. So it kind of shows C GPT of formatting. There are not ten different pieces of content here. There are seven, but it's just giving it as an example. So I'm going to copy this Come back. I'm going to come back to this prompt, block it the little pencil icon right here. You see it. So maybe you don't see it, hover towards the end of your prompt. You should find it. Okay. So there you go. And I am going to Yes. Erase all of this. Keep the beginning of my prompt. And then paste the rest of the information. So now if I scroll back up, it goes like this. Summarize this Wikipedia page on cybersecurity into a two to three paragraph overview of the main ideas. Do not answer yet. This is just another part of the text I want to send you. Just receive and acknowledge as part one out of seven receive. Okay. So let's try this. I'm going to regenerate based on that new prompt. Alright, so as you can see, this part is the part that has been generated by the CPT prompt splitter. Next part. So I'm going to go and copy the second part. You see how cool this website, it indicates that the first part is done. So copy the second one. Come back here. I'm going to paste it, simply run the prompt, part two received. Okay, ready for the next one. And like so, you just go back and forth between your CGPT window and the different parts here. I'm going to speed up the video, but you got the idea. And there you go. So now, all parts received, how can I assist you further with processing the request? So, what I'm going to do here, I'm going to repeat my prompt, which seems to be overlooked in the first one. Summarize this weekiPD page answer in one or two paragraph. Okay. There you go. So you see how useful this prompt splitter has been for me, allowed me to paste all of that context of the Wikipedia page right here in the contextual window. Now, I was able to run my prompt, which was not possible in the first place. Again, I will have a link in the description of this lecture of this prompt splitter website. It's a free website, easy to use. I found it. There might be other ones out there. I am not affiliated with this website at all. I just found it super useful. So therefore, sharing it with you guys. So here is my summary right here. The Wikipedia page on Cybersecurity covers a broad range of topics related to safeguarding computer systems, networks and data from unauthorized access attacks and damage. It discusses various aspects of cybersecurity, including strategies, technologies, and challenges faced in protecting digital assets. The page outlines key concepts such as access control, encryptions, endpoint security, firewalls, and intrusion detection systems highlighting their roles in mitigating cyber threats, Okay, et cetera, et cetera. This gives me a pretty good overview. I feel of what cyber security is all about, and saves me pretty much half an hour of really reading through all of that Wikipedia page. And I'm not saying you shouldn't read it. It's obviously much more robust than the summary that I'm getting here. But at least the summary gives me a comprehensive overview. Of what cybersecurity is all about. Is this something I want to dedicate a couple of months of my life to, like, learning? Maybe I'm going to go deeper and study this for a couple of years. Is this something worth investing my time in? So, in my opinion, that is what these kind of prompts can help you achieve in terms of decision making, where you are going to spend your time and resources. Alright, great. Now, let me show you the final prompt for this lecture, which for me is kind of like the best prompt, because this will allow me to work together with Ch GPT to create a personalized learning plan for me and learning cybersecurity in the amount of time that I have available. For doing that, okay? So let me show you the prompt first. It goes like this. I'm trying to learn more about cybersecurity and potentially find a job in that industry. Can you create a customized learning plan for me that will help me go from beginner to advanced in the field of cybersecurity? What are the different topics and sub topics I should study about? And in what order, I have six months to become an expert. Okay? So I told Chachi Pit very clearly what my goal was, to become an expert in cybersecurity, and I told it, I have six month. Make me a customized learning plan. Okay? Let's see what happens. Certainly, yes. So CJP is always here to help, right? So there you go. I have my six month kind of, like, plan here. Month one is going to be an introduction to cybersecurity, basics of cybersecurity doing Week one, networking fundamentals, Week two, three, cryptography basics on Week four. Month two would be dedicated to cybersecurity foundations. Okay? So operating system security, web security, Month three, advanced cybersecurity concepts, Week one to two, intrusion detection and prevention systems, malware analysis and reverse engineering, four cybersecurity tools and technology, Month five specialized cyber security topics and month six advanced cybersecurity skills. Additional recommendation, continuous learning. Stay updated with the latest cybersecurity trends news and emerging threats, et ce et cetera. Certifications. Consider pursuing industry recognized certifications. Okay. Interesting, and hands on practice, apply theoretical knowledge through hands on labs, capture the flag, competition, et cetera, et cetera. By following this structured learning plan and dedicating sufficient time and effort, you can significantly advance your skills in cybersecurity within the next six months. Good luck on your learning journey. All right. So this is pretty complete, I would say. Obviously, I can take this as my starting point and then for each month or even each week, ask GPT to develop a much more detailed plan, like, Okay, for example, month two Cybersecurity Foundation, Week one to two operating system security. I could ask for a detailed, like, hour to hour almost learning plan that really digs and drills deeper into this specific point, like operating system security. So you could totally do this, but I just wanted to show you that CG PT can really help you get started in learning any skill, which is, in my opinion, such a great opportunity because this is free. Like, if you have access to the Internet, this is the version of CG PT that is accessible to anyone. You can from this from your mobile phone and learn anywhere in the world as long as you're connected to the Internet. So I think this is going to change education. I think this is going to change universities work. We're not there yet. But yeah, I wouldn't bet on universities. Alright, folks, let's wrap it up with some of the limitations of using CGPTi to learn from online resources. Number one is obviously that what you find online is not always great, right? So the quality of these resources may highly vary. Alright? So that's number one. Number two, is that without access to the Internet, CGPT cannot really recommend you more resources to explore. It's limited by its knowledge cutoff. So for example, it would be great if C GPT could recommend a few other articles to read or a few YouTube videos to watch on a specific topic. We're not there yet. At least without the access to the Internet. Number three, and as always, you should always validate the accuracy of the content created or the summaries created by CT GPT, take it with a grain of salt. And finally, you would always need books or online courses like the one you're following right now with me for a more comprehensive learning experience. 4. Learn the Basics of Any Language Faster: Yeah, I speak Spanish, and I actually learned to speak Spanish way before CG PT was a thing. However, if I were to begin learning another language today, I would certainly turn to CPT as my personal language tutor. In this lecture, I'll show you a few prompts that will help you use CP to speed up any language learning. We'll see how to generate customized lesson plans, engage in conversation, and receive one on one feedback to learn a new la And here is a quick overview of what we cover in this lecture. We'll see how to create personalized daily or weekly language learning plans, we'll study vocabulary and key sentences per themes or per topic. We'll practice written conversations on everyday topics for fluency. We'll use CGPT as a tutor that will correct any translation or grammar mistakes that we make. And we will use C GPT to generate quick little quizzes and fill in the blanks to help us revise the vocabulary and other grammatical things we just learn. Alright, so let's say we want to learn Spanish. I believe it is important to start by giving Cache Pit some context. Some context about obviously the language we want to learn, in this case, Spanish, but also where we come from. What other language do you speak? And from which language are we going to learn that Spanish. So I'm going to start by giving it some context. And the context is this, I want to learn how to speak Spanish. I am a native French speaker who also speaks English. And because I'm prompting in English, Chachi Pit will understand that I am going to learn Spanish from the perspective of an English speaker. Right. So this is just the information, I would say, the context for C GPT. Let's just give it that first prob. That's great. Being fluent in French and English will certainly give you a good foundation for learning Spanish. Since French and Spanish share some similarities due to their common Latin roots, you might find certain aspects of Spanish grammar vocabulary familiar. Okay? Here are some steps you can take to start learning Spanish. Start with the basics, build your vocabulary, focus on grammar, practice speaking, immerse yourself, take formal classes, or use language learning apps, and be patient and consistent. Okay, so that's just a general overview pieces of advice from CGPit on how to get started with the Spanish? Okay, so that is all well. I have some good contacts here. Now, I want CGPT to kind of help me generate a more detailed or specific learning plan. Okay? For this, I'm going to be using this prompt. Can you suggest a ten week beginner Spanish learning curriculum for me? Okay. So I'm letting Chachi Pitino I am a beginner, and then I want to learn in ten weeks, right? So very quickly, I got my response, my answer generated here, and it will be divided into ten different weeks. So week one, introduction to Spanish, learn the Spanish alphabet, basic pronunciation, practice, greetings, and common phrases. Introduce yourself in Spanish. Week two, basic vocabulary, Week three, grammar basics, week four daily routine and activities, Week five, food and drinks, Week six, travel and directions, Week seven, pastimes and hobbies. Mm hm. Week eight, shopping, and clothing, nine health and emergencies, and Week ten, review and conversation practice. Okay. And from here, I could go even deeper and ask for a day to day kind of schedule by breaking down every single week. So I would write something like, right, so give me, for example, a day per day plan for Week nine, health and emergencies. What should I learn on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, et cetera. And CGPT will give me a breakdown of that. That would be a very similar prompt to the one I just used to generate this first schedules. So let's move on to something else. Let's say, I want to focus on learning the vocabulary because I believe you should get when you learn any new language, should get to a level of understanding the vocabulary, the number of words you actually know. You should get there to a specific number very fast because this will be your base. If you don't have any vocabulary, you pretty much won't be able to say anything. So the next prompt I'm going to be using for learning this vocabulary is this one right here. Let's focus on learning vocabulary. Suggest an exhaustive list of beginner friendly vocabulary categories for me to learn the basics of Spanish. A few examples of categories would be basic greetings and courtesies, numbers, colors, days of the week, every day, regular verbs, ordering food and drinks, et cetera. So you see here, I'm asking for vocabulary categories, not specifically vocabulary words, but vocabulary categories. Because once I will have these categories, I could prompt deeper. And also, I'm giving CGPT some examples. Again, this is few shots learning. So giving it, a few examples so that it understands very clearly what I'm asking it. Alright, let's run this prompt and see what it does. Alright, so it gives me the categories. I have one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, seven different categories here. And for each category, it starts to give me some vocabulary. Alright? So maybe seven categories is not so much. So you can always follow up. By asking it, let's have a look first at what it gave me here. So basic greetings and numbers, colors, days of the week, month, every day regular verbs, and ordering food and drinks. So it just limited itself to what I've been asking in the prompt. I want more than that, so I could follow up with the prompt like this one. Okay, this was good. Give me 15 more categories. And it will like that continue to generate. Hopefully, I get my 15. So family members, which is good, a familia armano all of this is good. It's going a bit slower now. Not sure what the term, picked up the speed. Let's see. All right. So first is family members, and I've got body parts, animals, professions, places in the city, weather, I've got emotions, transportation, clothing, and that's it. So I didn't get 15. I got nine. So This is something that will frequently happen to you when you use C GPT, you'll ask for a specific number of like parts in your answer. You'll get less, you'll get more. CGP is not great with numbers, but you can always prompt for more. It will continue, generate more, and you will get at least six, seven, eight different categories. Alright, so I think I have enough categories now, nine plus the previous seven, I think it was. So that was good. Let me show you my next prompt. And that problem goes like this. I want to drill down the vocabulary bit, okay? So I'm trying to learn some Spanish vocabulary. I'm going to give you a category. Your task is to create a list of 20 to 30 words or expressions related to that category for me to learn some new vocabulary. You will format the list of vocabulary into a table with the English words or expressions on the left and the Spanish equivalent on the right column. Then let's add a third column with phonetics. If you understand, reply with what's the category? Okay. So let's try this prompt. It should ask me what's the category. Perfect. Great. Let's just take the last category here, and let's just put clothing. Okay? Just go to put clothing. It should generate that table. Yeah. There you go. So, perfect. This is great. Let's see how many. This is not 20 to 30, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten. That's about 20:11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18 1920. That is 20 words. That's not too bad. It respected my prompt. I said, 20 to 30 gave me 20. A bit lazy. Hey, I respected the prompt. Also, what I like is that I have my pronunciation, my phonetics here. So this is a little trick to really help people who are not that familiar with Spanish pronunciation. For example, shirt, Kamisa. You have the English phonetics, is Cam Kamisa You have to sound a little bit less American or British Kamisa not Carma. All right. So anyway, we have the phonetics, pantalon faldas Best Alright. So I think the phonetics will help greatly. So let's try another category here. Let's try going on a trip. And you see, I don't repeat the prompt or anything. I'm just giving it the name of another category and just hit return. So, got it going on a trip. Here are 20 travel related words or expressions. So great. I've got trip, airport, airplane tickets, passport, visa luggage. So these are really cool. These are your, I would say typical most important words when you're learning a language. And again, you have the phonetics here. So, perfect. This works great. Now, let's crank it up a notch. And instead of just vocabulary, like words, let's ask it for more elaborated sentences or expressions, still related to these categories of useful Everyday vocabulary to learn when you're learning a new language. And the prompt I will use for that is the following. Great. Now, can you create a similar table with simple sentences and expressions related to that same category? Use the same table format with the same three columns. So if I hit enter here, if I launch this prompt, I should have sentences and expressions related to going on a trip? Let's try. Of course, here is a table with 20 simple sentences and expressions related to traveling in English and their Spanish equivalent along with pronunciation. So there we go now. Instead of simple words like single words we have expressions like little sentences like, I'm going on a trip. I need to go to the airport. The airplane is delayed. Where's my ticket? I have my passport. All of this speaking to speak Spanish with you now. Yeah. All of this is very useful. We are at gate five, taco. All of this is great. So now, let's try something else. If I switch category without giving any further explanation, will it understand that it needs to create a list of expressions about this new category? So let's say ordering food at a restaurant. Let's see. Got it. Yeah. It starts to create my sentences about this new category. I would like to order. Can I see the menu? I'd like the chicken for my main course, Ci Poo, Par Plato All of this is great, perfect. So now, I know how to generate vocabulary list. Expression and short simple sentences list. I would say we are on a good track to learn the language. If you take let's say a week or two weeks. Let's say an hour a day and you ask Can GPT to generate maybe these lists about two maybe three different topics or themes, and you really make the effort to practice to learn. To study them. Then, I believe you are up to something good. But how do you test that knowledge? Like, you could be studying these lists for half an hour. How do you know you start to digest this information? Well, this is where this next prompt comes in. Let me show you a way to ask Chachi Pit to generate little quizzes, little test for you. Alright, so here is the prompt. Generate three types of quizzes and exercises for me to practice the previous vocabulary list and short sentences, fill in the blank, exercise in Spanish, a multiple choice exercise and a short conversational exercise in Spanish. Use only the words and sentences you generated in your previous answers for the exercises. You will generate a new answer with all the answers to the exercises only when I prompt you to show me the answer. All right. So here we ask GPT to help us practice, review the information we learned earlier by creating these three little exercises. And also, we don't want to have the answers included or to see the answers even. So we ask it specifically, to not show us the answer until we ask it to do so. So let's run the prompt and see what happens. Sure. Here are the exercises for practicing. All right. This went very fast. All right. So the first one, fill in the blanks exercise in Spanish. My three answers, gustaria The answer is Gustus I would like to order. So it gives me three possibilities here. This is more like a multiple choice exercise. You could ask it to generate the same one without the help, like the three different options there. So that would be an option. And I can show you how we would prompt in order to ask it for not showing me the three possibilities. Multiple choice. All right. So here we do have a problem because it includes the right answer in the sentence to start with. So yeah. This is not great. Let's see the last one, short conversational exercise. Waiter Buenas customer Water So I will just give it this feedback. These exercises don't really make sense in exercise two. You don't leave any blank. You don't leave anything blank. You just gave me all the answers. And in the conversation, you mixed up the role of the waiter and the customer, okay? Please start over and give me better exercises. Also for the filling the blanks, don't suggest any answers. Let me do the work. Okay, let's run this. Let's see if it can generate some better quizzes. Yes, I think we are up to something much better, right? Let's see. Let's start with the first one. Apologies for the confusion. So it apologizes to me. Let's try again. Okay, fill in the blanks, Mgusta I would like to order. So now, it gives me a little bit of context. Give me the English translation. So Mgusta The answer here should be d. Can I see the menu, three comma. What do you recommend. Recommend or plan. I would like. We don't know here, so still not perfect, but ln for example. All right. Let's move on to multiple choice, Clang. All right. So this one still not great. So I'm a little bit disappointed. I've seen some better exercises generated before. Let's focus on the conversation one more time, short conversation on exercises in Spanish, water Buena Ordin customer. So it's still not great because the rows are still mixed up. All right. So, you know, we tried. It's not always going to work. Maybe if we were using the latest model here, C P four, maybe we would get more chance. So this is something worth trying. But since we didn't generate all the list of vocabulary, we'd have to start all over from scratch, which we're not going to do here. I have the intuition. It would work better, but we are going to leave it here and just admit, accept that it wasn't that great at generating these short exercises. Alright, let's move on to the next prompt. And let's see if we can practice conversations, written conversations with Ch GPT, based on the vocabulary we have studied together. And the prompt goes like this. Let's have a five minute conversation in Spanish about then opening the bracket, my daily routine. You will make sure to keep the conversation going by asking me the right questions. After each of my answers, you will correct any grammar, vocabulary, or spelling mistakes I have made if necessary. If what I said was correct and well said, you won't give me any feedback, but just keep the conversation going. So, I believe this is a very powerful exercise because it will force me to practice, to be conversational. With the AI. And also, I will learn from the mistakes I make because it's supposed to correct me to stop me and correct me every time I make a mistake. So let's just kick start this and see how it goes. So it's switching to Spanish Rina. So it just said, of course, let's just talk about your daily routine. What do you usually do when you wake up in the morning? So I will say something like Mogao. Let's not make any mistake. This sentence is grammatically correct. So, right, so Cu. What do you usually have for breakfast? So here, I'm going to create a mistake on purpose. Normalmente. Davos. Waves. So eggs usually takes an H. I'm going to write it without the Homo waves, okay? So it should perfectos vs son option nutritivas vs Cargo mas. Okay. So here, it didn't correct my spelling mistake. Well, it actually did use the word with the correct spelling, but it didn't let me know. That I made a spelling mistake. So I'm going to correct that, and I'm going to let it know by using this prompt. Wait a second. You didn't correct my spelling mistakes for vs that I spelled vs without the H. Please make sure you correct all my spelling and grammar mistakes from now on. Let's see. So it didn't say anything about it correcting my mistakes. So I'm going to answer by creating another mistake on purpose. See, omelet is not the proper spelling. Let's see. Ten met met. So here again, it didn't listen to me. It didn't correct my spelling mistake. Omelette. It's only one L and two Ts, right? So, here it wrote it correctly with only one L. So I will need to be stricter. Okay. Okay, stop. You don't correct my errors, and that defies the exercise. So I need you to correct all my spelling and grammar mistakes. Do you understand? Let omelet. So here, C is being very annoying with me. It's being very boring. So I'm going to test this one more time and see if it corrects my spelling mistakes, all right? Okay, Carrots. I like to add carrots, okay? I asked me what other ingredients would you like to use in your omelet. So Sanorias is very poorly written. It has at least two errors in there. Perfect Sanaa Correa. So here, it corrects me. It says, perfect. Sanoias with the proper spelling is the correct word. Algoms omelet. Let's create another mistake to double and triple check. Musa eso is with Q, not with a K. Excellent o algo mas. Okay. So now it's working. So I could continue this conversation. I could change the topic. Okay. Let's change the topic and now talk about my job. Okay. Let's see. Claro, iza. So YouTuber, I trata it just keeps on asking me things in Spanish in order to keep the conversation going. And I believe now it will correct every single grammar and spelling mistake. So it's not always going to be an organic process. Like sometimes CPT will make mistakes, we'll forget things. It is the nature of using CGPT Unfortunately, for now. As we've seen before, it is an iterative approach. So it won't be perfect the first time. You will need to kind of, like, fix it as you go, correct the trajectory until you get something that works. And then once you've found that something that works, keep on prompting the same, guys, let's wrap up the lecture by talking about some of the limitations when using ChagpT to learn a new language. The first one is that Ch GPT is only going to give you vocabulary, but also feedback on what it has been programmed about, right? So it will always be limited by that. And you will certainly not learn the latest slang from the street, the way specific social groups or subculture pronounce or use specific expressions. So all of that will not be included in what you will learn with Cha GPT. Second limitation is that your conversations with Ca GPT, will lack real interactivity, this human touch that CGPT cannot yet reproduce. Third limitation is that CGPT cannot help you with pronunciation errors, which is really important, I would say, when learning a new language, you need to pronounce correctly, the best we can do, and as we've seen, when we were prompting CGPT to ask it to generate list of the phonetics version of the Fourth limitation is that assessments on only test are quite basic, and they won't really evaluate your level of fluency with the language. You can only do so much with fill in the blanks, multiple choices, exercises when it comes to learning a language. And then last but not least, you will always need some sort of immersion or real human conversation to become fluent in any language. So these are things that you need to keep into consideration when learning a new language with AI or with C GP. While it is not perfect and should definitely be complemented by immersion or conversation with real humans, relying on Ch GPT to learn a new language can definitely jumpstart your learning journey. 5. Design Personalized Learning Plans: In a world where university tuition fees can soar to tens of thousands of dollars seeking alternative ways to acquire skills and knowledge is the logical choice. And for years, platforms like YouTube, wikipedia, or online course marketplaces like Skillshare or mine, have been go to places for people who couldn't afford these expensive university degrees. But now with the advent of AI, there is a new player in the field. In this lecture, I will show you different ways to prompt GPT to create customized study plans, curriculums, and sequencing for self directed learning. And these personalized learning path offer a more flexible but most importantly, a more cost effective approach to education. I believe AI has the potential to make education available and affordable for everyone. Now, here's a list of what we will learn in this lecture. We'll start by asking for learning roadmaps, catered to our goals and our needs. Then we'll get GPT to generate study schedules tailored to the time we have on our hands. Next, we'll see how we can get customized learning plans for different topics, different subjects we want to study about. We'll ask GPT to sequence the resources we would like to study. In order to approach them in the optimal order, and you'll see how important that is. And finally, we'll use CA GPT to refine our plans based on some progress we might have made or in order to get feedback on what we've learned so far. That could be also going deeper on specific points. So we'll see how we can prompt CGPT to follow up, to go deeper or to change the course of what we are studying. All right, so let's assume we are in the middle of a career change, right? We want to do something completely different with our life, with our career. And let's say we want to become a graphic designer, okay? We want to learn how to become a freelance graphic designer. So let's start by priming Ch GPT and giving it that information about ourselves. So you could start your prompt in this way. I want to take a 180 degree turn. In my career and become a freelance graphic designer. Okay? So that is the context. That is the beginning of my prompt. Then I will ask GPT. That would be my first prompt. I will ask it to help me design a learning plan, kind of like a learning schedule for me to achieve a specific goal I have in mind. Okay? So the prompt goes like this. What would be the fundamental topics slash to learn to become a opening the bracket freelance graphic designer in three months. Here again, you can have a different duration depending on how much time you have on your hand. Create a detailed study plan that would keep me busy 6 hours a day, five days a week. Okay? So again, you can modulate the number of hours per day, the number of days per week. But this one is considering I'm going full time on this. I really would like to become a freelance graphic designer within three months. Let's run the Let's see what CJPiti has to say here, and let's see what it suggests me I start studying. Right. So here's the answer, transitioning into a career as a freelance graphic designer in just three months is an ambitious goal. But with a well structured study plan and dedication, it is achievable. Here's a detailed study plan that covers fundamental topics and skills you will need to learn keeping you busy for 6 hours per day, five days a week. It kind of repeats the boundaries, the conditions I set in my prompt. Alright, so weeks one and two, introduction to graphic design basics. So day one to five will be dedicated to understanding graphic design fundamentals. So then I have a breakdown third day. I have day one introduction to graphic design, day two typography. Day three colors theory, the four layout and composition, and the five design software familiarization. Get acquainted with software like Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, and in design. All right, so week three to four, building graphic design skills. And again, a breakdown per day. All right, so that's pretty cool. Week five to six, advanced design concepts, advanced photoshop techniques, design projects, photo manipulation. Alright, so I see my content plan here for the 12 weeks, which is equivalent to three months. It's about 50 working days. Okay, five days a week. And yeah, it seems pretty complete. So the next step from Would be either I could prompt deeper and ask for a breakdown of topics and things to learn on a weekly basis or even on a daily basis, now that I have, for example, the 36 to 40 business essentials. Okay, so I could drill down on that. Or I could just pick and choose, for example, here, the 36 37 freelancing basics, understand contracts, pricing strategies. Client communications. So all of these keywords, I could use that to prompt deeper. For example, contracts right here. I could have a prompt like this one. Can you create a templated contract for my future graphic design gigs, okay? Let's run that. Certainly. And then here, CGPT is going to draft a templated contract that I could probably use. I would have obviously to kind of tweak that contract. But I have 80% of the backbone of that contract already created, already drafted for me here. Could probably go ahead and work with this. Okay, so I have all the typical things that need to be included in a contract. Now, I would definitely take that with a grain of salt. Read this very carefully, maybe try to compare it with the contract, a friend of mine, who is a graphic designer is already using. You know, you could ask for advice to friends or people, you know. Maybe you're benefiting from the help of your local job seeking organization. Or maybe you know someone that can read this and help you give you some tips. So this is always obviously a good thing to do to not just take this and send this to a client. All right. Let's move on. I want to show you an example of a prompt to go much deeper into a specific point here. For example, if we come back to the beginning of our learning plan, understanding the graphic design fundamentals. The one to five. If I was to study like graphic design fundamentals in a much deeper way. I could use a prompt like this one. I want you to act as a university teacher who teaches graphic design in a prestigious establishment. My goal is to master the following principles of design. And then I will list a few of them. Balance, contrast, emphasis, movement, wide space, proportion, hierarchy, and repetition. Provide a detailed definition of each principle. Use real life example to show how they can be applied to graphic design work. Projects and suggest additional resources I could use to deepen my understanding of it. Use formatting and highlight the name of the principles. Keep in mind that I am new to the world of graphic design. So this is a quite elaborated prompt, but it should work if I want to really go deeper. So there you go. CJ Pit answered Spradaway certainly. Let's delve into each principle of design and explore how they are applied in graphic design, along with some example and additional resources for further learning. So the first one is balance. Okay, so I get a definition. Balance refers to the distribution of visual weight within a design. So I get the definition, I've got an example. In a poster design, balance can be achieved by placing large heavy elements such as text or graphics on one side of the composition and balancing them with smaller, lighter elements on the opposite side. Additional resources, I have a book, graphic design school, the principles and practice of graphic design by David Dabner, Sandra Steward, and Eric ample. This has to be double checked. Online courses, graphic design basics, core principles for visual design on Coursera. This needs to be double checked as well. All right. So second point contrast. And again, definition example, additional resource. So what I'm going to do right now is to open a second tab here. And I'm going to search for this book to see if that is a real book. Alright, so let's paste that title, see if that is a book. Graphic Design School, the Principals. Okay. It seems like we found something on Amazon, graphic design school, the principals and practice of graphic Design, fifth edition by Sandra Steward, Eric ample and David Dabner. Come back here, is this the same book. Yeah, graphic design school, the principal of practice, David Dabner Yeah. It is a real book. So that wasn't too bad. Now, I'm not going to double check every single piece of information, but you definitely should because this tends to be not that great. Like maybe CP is getting better at this. But every time I've done it like prompted for additional resources or suggested links and videos and stuff like that, it's kind of like 50 50. You know what I'm saying? So definitely double check every single link. Every single reference or resource that is being cited by CPT. All right. So this worked well. I have my all of the design principles I asked for, seven the eight different principles right here. Let's move on to something else. Right, let's try something else now. Let's move away from the graphic design, freelancer thing. Let's pretend I have to deliver a presentation in about two months on emotional intelligence. And let's admit it. I don't know much about emotional intelligence. So let's see how we can use CGPT to kind of prepare ourselves for that big presentation we have coming into So I will be using this problem right here. Please create a daily study schedule for learning about emotional intelligence between brackets. In 2 hours per day, three days a week. That is the time I have to learn that skill. My goal is to be able to deliver a 19 minute webinar on the topic in two months. All right, so let's run the prompt and see how CGPT intends to prepare me for my webinar. All right, so weeks one and two, understanding emotional intelligence. Day one, day two, day three. So I told it 2 hours per day, three days a week, for two months, all right? So day one day two day three, and then I have the following weeks, day four, five, so that should be in total all the way down 24 days. Okay. And it just breaks down all the different things I need to be learning. And this goes from introduction to emotional intelligence, the four components of emotional intelligence assessing my own, emotional intelligence, developing emotional awareness, cultivating self awareness, managing my emotions, building social awareness, enhancing relationship management, effective communication skills, building strong relationships, applying emotional intelligence in leadership, preparation, and practice. So week seven and eight, we are going to switch gear and just focus on the workshop on the webinar. So the ten and 12 will be about developing the webinar content, rehearsing and fine tuning. So until we are ready by the four. Right. So here we have the entire plan. Obviously, we can prompt deeper, we can refine the prompts. But, you know, we gave it a different time frame. We gave it a different objective, and I believe it did a great job at breaking down the amount of work and distribute it among the available time that I had on my hands. So I'm very happy with this. I just wanted to show you you can really by using the proms I'm giving you, change the variables in the brackets, change the goals, and you should be good to go. All right. Moving on to the last prompt for this lecture. This one is about sequencing, right? In which order should I approach specific topics like algebra, for example. So the prompt is the following. In what order, should I learn algebra, and it's different concepts to build my knowledge incrementally. I am a total beginner. Provide the most logical learning sequence that covers what's in the curriculum of a high school student all the way to senior year. Okay. So, let's imagine I want to help my hypothetical son with his algebra classes. I am a parent, and I don't remember anything about algebra. All right? I studied this when I was his age, but now let's admit it. I don't know anything anymore about algebra. So I need to review with the help of my friend here, Ch GPT so that I can at least not look like a total ignorance. In the eyes of my son. All right? So let's run the prompt and see in which order GPT recommends I learn algebra. So there you go, number one, numbers and operations. Learn about the number system, including whole numbers, integers, fraction, decimals, and irrational numbers, right, expressions and equations, linear equations and inequalities, graphing linear functions, systems of equations and inequalities, exponents and polynominals, quadratic equations and functions, radicals and rational expressions, functions and relations, and advanced topics. Okay. So here is a detailed plan that scares the hell out of me. But yeah, I do remember some vague memories of learning these things at school. So if you do need some examples for example of this functions and relations. You could could prompt something like this. Give me a few examples of functions and relations. Let's do this. Let's see what it is about. Linear functions, quadratic function, exponential function, a bunch of different functions here. And you see C CPT is pretty good at writing mathematical characters. So formulas and all that stuff here looks pretty good. I wish I understand what I was reading, but I'm not. But yeah, so this is how you could really get the help of CGPT to understand in which order to tackle a topic, which could be a broad topic, could be entire material that you need to study at school or for curriculum. This could be good to know which one to start first, second and third. As always, let's finish the lecture with some of the limitations of using C GPT to create this customized learning path. And the first limitation is that these learning plans lack real time adjustments based on our progress. So once it's been generated, C GPT doesn't know where we are in the schedules. The second limitation is that if we do ask C GPT to generate links, websites, videos, to additional resources, these are often outdated or broken. All right, so that is if you are using CGPT plus and for GPT to point you to specific resources. These links often don't work. Third limitation is that it is obviously less effective to create learning path this way than to have a real professor, human coach or tutor to show you the way. And then the last limitation I would like to talk about is that the quality of these schedule, these plans will highly depend on how you articulate your prompt, on how you make it clear, C GPT, that this is the goal you are kind of like striving for. All right? The clearer your goals are explained, the better the learning plan. So it will always be limited by how well your prompt is formulated. All right, folks, I hope you found this lecture interesting and beneficial. In the next one, I'll show you how to turn C GPT into a personalized tutor. 6. Get Tutored on Any Subject: I remember listening to an interview of Emad Mustache a few months ago. Mad is the founder and CEO of Stability AI, which is the world's leading open source generative AI company. And during the interview, he shared his exciting vision for the future of education. And that vision really stuck with me. In a nutshell, he explained how generative AI and chat bots could transform learning, offering every child on the planet the chance to have a world class tutor right there. Their pocket. Now, isn't that an encouraging vision, access to education for everyone? In this lecture, we are going to explore how to leverage CGPTi as a private tutor to support our learning efforts through explanations, examples, practice, and personalized guidance. And here are a few things we are going to cover. We'll ask CGPT to explain concepts in simple terms. We'll have it walk us through and give us examples and sample problems. We'll request additional explanations when topics are unclear or complicated. We'll ask CGPT to give us definitions and interpretations of key terminology, and we'll also use CGPT for guided practice and feedback. All right. Let's start with something easy. I would like CGPT to simply explain some concepts to me that I have come across in my econ class. All right, so the prompt is the following. I am a freshman in high school, so I'm giving it some context. Currently, studying from my Econ one class exam. Okay? So I'm telling you the exact subject I'm studying in the level. Please explain the concept of elasticity of supply and demand as if you are my private tutor. Okay? So here, I would like Chachi Pit to explain to me in simple terms what Elasticity of supply and demand means in the context of an econ class. Right. So let's just run this prompt and see what comes up. Of course. Let's dive into the concept of elasticity of supply and demand. All right. So here, it starts to generate the response. Let's have a quick look. First, definition. Elasticity of demand measures how sensitive the quantity demanded of a good is to a change in its price. Example, if the price of a certain brand of sneakers increases, but people still buy about the same number of sneakers, the demand is inelastic. On the other hand, if the price of a luxury item like designer handbags increases slightly, and people drastically reduce their purchases, then the demand is elastic. So, That is the definition with some examples. Then it gives me some factors that could affect the elasticity of demand. For example, the availability of substitutes. If there are many substitutes available, people can easily switch to other products if the price increases, making demand more elastic. Necessity versus luxury, necessities tend to have inelastic demand because people need them regardless of the price. On the other hand, luxuries often have more elastic demand because people can easily do without them if the price goes up. So that was for the elasticity of demand. Then I have the same explanation. I would say three parts with definition example and factors affecting the elasticity for the supply. So I have demand and supply, and it's nicely structured into these different paragraphs, I would say. So I believe this was a very good explanation for having studied elasticity of supply and demand when I was in my econ classes. Yeah, I think it would have been very useful. To have this kind of technology back then to simply ask for questions because sometimes when you come across the material in your class and the teacher is there in front of 200 people and it goes fast, maybe you don't get it exactly like that. So that was the first thing I wanted to show you how we can prompt GPT to clarify to explain complex concepts. Alright, so now let's say you are good with this, but you really want to fixate that knowledge, like, understand deeply and never forget anymore what is elasticity of demand and supply. So we could follow up and ask for Chachi Pit to summarize all of that information into a shorter package, and also give us some examples that would help us understand. So we could proceed with a prompt like this one. Please summarize that information into a few simple rules that will help me remember the concept. Also, provide three examples of goods or services with elastic and non elastic supply and demand. Okay? So let's run this prompt and see how CGPT can summarize this concept for me. If quantity demanded changes significantly. With a small change in price, then the demand is called elastic. On the other hand, if quantity demanded changes only slightly with a large change in price, then the demand is inelastic. Similarly, for supply, if quantity supplied, Changes significantly, with a small change in price, Supply is elastic. If quantity supply changes only slightly with a large change of price, supply is inelastic. And then it gives me my examples like I asked for, airline tickets. If the price of an airline ticket increases, people might choose to travel by train car instead making demand elastic. Other ones include designer clothing, luxury cars. So when these goods, like the price of these goods increases, people might turn to other alternative, which makes the demand elastic. On the other hand, inelastic demand, things like gasoline, medicine, electricity, which are things that we need absolutely need to survive or to live, simply. So there is less elasticity in the demand because we still need to buy them. All right? So I think CGPT did a good job here. And after reading all of this, after checking all of these facts, I can say that the information is actually correct. Alright. Moving on to something else Chan GPT can do for you is to simplify complicated concepts. Okay? So we already saw how as your tutor, it could explain these concepts. Now, let's see how they can be simplified, right? So the prompt I'm going to be using is this one right here. I am unclear on the concept of cognitive psychology from my psychology course. Can you explain it to me in simple terms? Okay. So what is cognitive psychology? So here's the answer. Certainly, cognitive psychology is all about understanding how people think, learn, remember and solve problems. Essentially, it's the study of the mind and how it works. Here's a simple breakdown. So Thing, learning, remembering, problem solving, and perception. Overall, cognitive psychology aims to uncover the processes behind these mental activities. By understanding how the mind works, psychologists can better explain and even improve human behavior and cognition. It's like picking inside our brains to understand how they tick. Alright, so I think it did a great job about simplifying this concept of cognitive psychology. Let's dive a bit deeper. Let's continue learning about the concept of cognitive psychology because I am in that psychology class, and I know I have a test coming next week. So I should probably dig deeper. All right? So let's use this prompt to go further. Who were some of the most important figures of cognitive psychology? And what did they discover? Explain all of that in simple terms. Also, use formatting to highlight the names and the main contributions. So here, and this is something quite common in psychology. I'm asking for the names of important contributors to this psychology trend, the psychology movement of cognitive psychology. So who were the main protagonists and what did they discover? Let's see what GPT can teach us on that topic. So the first one is Jean Piaget, with his main contribution, Piaget was a Swiss psychologist known for his work on child development. Okay, so a little bit of explanation. The second one, second psychologist is Eric Niser. Okay. Main contribution, Nicer is often considered the father of cognitive psychology. He introduced the term cognitive psychology in his book, Cognitive Psychology. The next one, Albert Bandura. Main contribution, Bandura is known for his work on social learning theory, and self efficacy. He conducted the famous Boboll experiment which demonstrated observational learning and the influence of modeling on behavior. To be honest, I don't know many. I heard about Piaget first. The first one, but the other ones, Elizabeth Loftus, George A Miller, I don't know about these psychology. So this is a good way for me to discover them. I could then maybe type their name into Wikipedia, to learn some more to go even deeper down the rabbit hole of cognitive psychology. But at least these few answers here gave me some leads to follow. So you could really prompt deeper and ask J GPT about Elizabeth Loftus and her entire work, the books she has written, the main theories she contributed to cognitive psychology, and maybe some of the debates around what she has written, like, controversies, like, you know, there is always more to ask. So we could always follow up and go deeper, which we are not going to do. The important thing is that you know you can go there. You can definitely continue prompting. All right. I want to move on and continue prompting CGPT still stay in the field of psychology, but broaden my scope a little bit, not just focus and laser focus on cognitive psychology. I want to learn more broadly about psychology. So I'm going to be using this prompt. I'm going to ask you a couple of follow up questions, and you will answer them rapid fire style. So, apart from cognitive psychology, what are the other branches of psychology? So that's the first question. Sure. Here are some branches of psychology. Clinical psychology, developmental psychology, social psychology, behavioral psychology, counseling, psychology, educational psychology, industrial, organizational psychology, biopsychology, or neuropsychology, health psychology, and forensic psychology. All right. So here I got a good overview of the different branches. Probably there are more, but these are probably the most important branches of psychology. Let's continue rapid fire style. What branch was Freud part of. Okay. So Sigmund Freud was primarily associated with the branch of psychology known as psycho Analysis. All right? Psychoanalysis, which was not listed here, psychoanalysis. So I am surprised to see that psychoanalysis was not one of the ten branches. So that was not one of the ten branches, you listed there. Now, was it? Okay. Can I always follow up and see, you're correct. I apologize for the oversight. Psychoalysis is often considered a distinct approach within psychology rather than a separate branch. But it does have its own unique principles and technique. Right? So, you see, if you're not clear about something, if you have doubt, you can always express them, and CajepT will bounce off of that. Okay, so here I'm learning that yeah, psychoanalysis is often considered its own distinct approach within psychology, rather than a branch of psychology. Let's do one more. I heard about this Pavlov dog, and I want to know what this thing is all about. So explain the Pavlov dogs experiment in simple language. All right? So I know sure even Pavlov's experiment with dogs is a classic example of classical conditioning. Here is simple explanation. Pavlov noticed that dogs naturally salivated produce saliva. When they saw a smelled food. He wondered if he could make the dog salivate in response to a different stimulus, like the sound by associating it with the food. So then I have a description of four steps. So first, Pavlov's dogs were hungry. Then Pavlov added a new element. Okay, while presenting the food, Pavlov also rang a bell. Okay. Third, associating the bell with the food. After repeating this process several times, the dogs started to associate the bell with the food. Conditioned response, eventually, just the sound of the bell, even without the food was enough to make the dogs salivate. Okay, so that is in a nutshell, Pavlov dogs experiment. In summary, Pavlov's experiment showed that through repeated pairing of a neutral stimulus, the bell with a meaningful stimulus, the food, the dogs learned to associate the bell with the food and respond to the bell alone with salivation. This process is known as classical conditioning and has implications for understanding how animals and humans learn to associate stimuli in their environment. So there we go very clear, in my opinion, an uncomplicated explanation of Pavlov dog's experiment. So if you do have a psychology test coming up next week and you read that and you understood that, there's a high chance you can at least tell about this experiment and maybe refer to it in your responses to the test question if that comes up. Alright, let me wrap up with a last prom that will allow me to kind of fixate the knowledge I gained while interacting with Chat GBT in this same conversation. Alright? So the prompt is the following. I want to practice what I've learned so far about cognitive psychology. Ask me some questions one by one, based on all the information you've provided me about that topic. Stick to the information you've actually provided me in this chat. After I give you an answer, give me some feedback and evaluate my answer. Provide complimentary information if you think my answer wasn't good enough. So this is a very powerful prompt that will allow you to kind of evaluate what you just learn with CGPT by asking it to only stick to the answers it provided you in that same conversation, you kind of safe and you know that this is only what is going to be evaluated. So let's run the prompt and let's see what questions it comes up with. Great. Question. What is cognitive psychology, and what does it study. So what I remember is that cognitive psychology is the study of the human brain and how it works. It studies, how we learn how how we learn, how we think, how we react to outside stimuli Simla Et cetera. Okay. Let's just leave it there. Your answer provides a solid overview of cognitive psychology. You correctly identified cognitive psychology as a study of the mind and its processes, including learning, thinking, and perception. Additionally, you mentioned how cognitive psychology examines our reaction to external stimuli. Well done. Cognitive psychology indeed delves into how people acquire, process, store, and retrieve information. It encompasses various aspects of mental functioning, such as memory, problem solving, decision making, language, and perception. This field helps us understand how individuals perceive the world around them, make sense of information and adapt to different situations. Keep up the good work. Now, let's move on to the next question. So, you see, I love that. First, it gave me some feedback about my answer. Okay, so that's the first paragraph. And then it kind of gave me additional it kind of filled in the gaps, like what I forgot to mention. I reminded me nicely here with some extra information of what I should probably remember for the next time. So I love that. And then the next question, can you name one influential figure in cognitive psychology and briefly describe their contribution to the field. Yeah, let's go with Piaget, which is the only one I remember the Swiss psychologist. Okay. I don't remember what he did. Correct. Jean Piaget was indeed a Swiss psychologist known for a significant contribution to cognitive psychology, particularly in the area of child development. Yeah. I read that blah, blah, blah. You know, I'm not going to go all the way, but Chachi Pit will continue giving you the next question. And give you feedback on your answer complemented by some extra information. I really love this prompt, and I really think you should start using it too. All right, guys, let's wrap up with a few limitations of using C GPT as a private tutor. The first one is that the information you get from Cha GPT needs to get fact checked. You absolutely cannot take this information for granted. You at least need to do some quick fact checking and double checking with different sources. The second is that when you practice with C GPT to test your knowledge, that practice will always be limited and without real time interaction. Unlike practicing with a human tutor, you will not have this back and forth conversation. It's going to be mostly one way and one question after the other. The third limitation is that CGPT cannot really deeply assess your understanding of any topic, but merely what you remember from that topic. So that is memory type of learning. And the fourth limitation is that it is not and will never be replacement for qualified human tutors. All right? So it is useful. Yes, but it should not be considered as a 100 replacement of a human person. Maybe we'll get there, but we're not there yet. I hope you enjoyed this lecture, and these proms helped you get a better understanding of what CG PT can do as a personal tutor. In the next lecture, I'll show you how you can use CGPT to get ready for tests and exams. So don't you go anywhere. 7. Prep for Tests and Exams: Back in my school days, tests and exams were kind of like my jam. Not that I particularly liked them. I remember as stressful times, but I was quite good at it. I would study for days and take it seriously. I mean, seriously, compared to most of my friends and usually get good grades. And here is a little secret between you and me. You see my best buddies had this tendency to pick a see right next to me during the exams, you know? In case they could get a clipse of my answers. And you know me. I'm a good guy. I like to share the knowledge. Now, I wish I had access to a tool like CG PT when I was studying for these exams. That would have made my life and the life of my buddies way easier. In this lecture, we'll look at how to use CGPT to generate practice quiz and exam questions to evaluate our knowledge on any topic. And we will be covering things like getting multiple choice questions for self assessment, getting CGPT to create practice tests on specific topics. We'll request some sample essays and short answer questions. We'll use C GPT to make quizzes tailored to what we need to study. And we also ask it for a timed exam situation, like, you know, when you're passing one of these standardized test and you have one, two, or 3 hours to do so. So we'll try to get as close as possible to this real life situation. All right. The first thing I want to show you is how you can use CC PT to generate quizzes to help you review specific material, right? So let's assume I am studying for my biology class, and here is my prompt. Can you generate ten multiple choice questions to quiz my knowledge of 12th grade biology. You will generate a new answer with all the answers to the exercises only when I prompt you to show me the answers. All right. So here giving CGPT some clear instructions with a clear level 12th grade biology. Okay, ten multiple choice questions. I'm not sure. Can answer them. Alright, so here we go. Question number one. Which one of the following is not a component of a nucleotide? Okay, phosphate group, ribose sugar, nitrogenous base, amino group. Mmm. I don't know. What is the function of a golgi apparatus in the cell? I don't know. Which one of the following is not a function of the lymphatic system, transporting white blood cells, draining excess tissues, fluid, absorbing fats from a digestive system, pumping blood to the rest of the body. So like this, obviously, I would probably fail my biology 12th grade exam. But I didn't study for it, so I have a good excuse. But I think these questions are pretty good. In which stage of mytosis do the chromosomes line up at the center of the cell. Which of the following is a characteristic of a dominant A, what is the primary function of the enzyme amylase, which of the following is a primary structure of a protein, et cetera, et cetera. I have my ten. So, so didn't give me the answer. Good luck with your quiz. Let me know when you're ready for the answers, like show me the answers, show me the answers. And now you can pretty much go back to each of the ten questions and check your answers. I am not in a position to fact check these answers because I simply don't know that. But I just wanted to show you you can like that, ask Ch GPT to generate a multiple question quiz about any topic. And like that learn review, you could ask for ten more questions about the same topic. Yeah. I think this is just a great way to study from your books, from your material, from school, and then just get some basic tests like this to test your knowledge. Right, so let's switch gear and see how CGPT can deal with open ended questions. So not multiple answer questions, but questions that will require me to start typing and start creating sentences. All right? So the prompt is this one. Create a five open ended question practice test on African geography suitable for a 16 year old student. You will generate a new answer with all the answers to the test only when I prompt you to show me the answers. Okay? So here, I am a 16 year old studying African geography. I chose example because I recently watched a TikTok video where people were asking adult Americans in the streets of some random city in the US, like, give me the name of one African country, and a lot of them said Wakanda. So that's what inspired this question if you ask me. All right, certainly. Let's see. I'm not an expert in Africa geography, but I could try. First question. Describe the major geographical feature of the Sahara desert and explain how they impact the region climate and human activities. Okay. Saharan desert kind of more or less know where it is. Could try. Discuss the significant Of the Nile River in African geography, including its importance for agriculture, transportation, and settlement patterns. Number three, explain the concept of desertification and its effect on the environment and human communities in Africa. Provide examples of regions affected by desertification and discuss possible solutions. Compare and contrast the physical geography of East Africa and West Africa focusing on factors such as landforms, climate, and vegetation. Describe the great Rift Valley and its significance in African geography. Discuss its formation, major features and its impact on the landscape and human activities in the region. All right, so this is a pretty robust test. Again, I didn't study before. I could probably give you some information about the Sahara Desert, which is covering parts of Tunisia, Morocco, Algeria, how they impact the region's climate. So obviously, it's a very dry, could be cold during the night, very hot during the day, regions climate and human activity, so there are some nomadic people traveling through this desert called Bedouin, if I remember correctly. Let's see, show me the answers. I'm going to ask you to show me the answers and kind of evaluate my response to the Sahara desert. Let's focus on the first one right here. Sahara desert is characterized by vast stretches of sand dunes, rocky plateaus, and gravel plains. It's climate is extremely dry and high temperature and low precipitation leading to arid conditions. A desert. These geographical features in climate impact the region by limiting agricultural productivity, promoting nomadic lifestyle, and influencing trade routes and settlement near Oasis and water sources. Alright, so I kind of had a few things right. But yeah, they explained it better. All right, then we have the answer to all of the other questions. So again, a different type of test, it kind of forced me to write some information, so open ended questions, but still a great way to review material on any topic because these questions are pretty relevant, I would say, to someone studying African geography. Let's again, change topic and see this time how we can generate, quick vocabulary quizzes when learning a language. Alright? So my prompt is the following. Make a vocabulary quiz for the Spanish words typically included in the Spanish five six class. Okay. So five six is the American way of kind of, like, structuring the different language classes. So it starts at one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten. Okay, so the different levels, nine, ten being the most advanced class. Five six is already pretty advanced, let's see what kind of test. Sure. Here's a vocabulary quiz for Spanish five six class. Cordpan I have AB armonia, difficult Concordania is concording when we have an agreement, it's the first one Armia pala. This was relatively easy for me because I do speak Spanish. But let's have a look at the other questions, significa significa la pipignific syntax and Espana. So all of these questions are pretty grammatical questions. So it's interesting. I could follow up and ask it to focus the test more on conversation. Let's do that. So great. And focus the questions more on conversations about the weather. For example, the weather. And there's a typo in weather here again, I have some weather oriented questions adapted to the level of Spanish five six class. So this is great. Show me the answers. Show me the answers. All right. So now I have the answers. Let's quickly double check question four, for example, correct. Para Gran Espan bolitas the yellow dora. So Granico is like a gray when small balls of ice is falling from the sky. I think it's called gray in English. Yeah. Grano and pan. Alright, so this was confluent. This is an appropriate vocabulary test for my Spanish five six class. And see if Chad GPT can simulate an SAT test, which is a standardized test for that students take in the United States to kind of, like, determine which university and colleges they could get access to. So it's a very important test that is very stressful for senior year students because that could determine their future academic trajectory and which colleges and schools they have access to. So they need to prepare for this test. Okay, so the prompt is Simulate a 45 minute SAT reading comprehension section exam with ten questions. So let's see. So the reading passage, so obviously a reading comprehension needs to refer to some reading some sort of reading material. So here we go, we have the reading passage right here, the Great Gatsby by Scott Fitzgerald. So we have about, five, six paragraphs in my younger and more vulnerable years, blah, blah, blah, so there is the passage, and then we have ten different questions. These are Q&As. Okay. So what advice did the narrator father give him to always criticize others freely, to remember that not everyone has had the same advantages. So usually these SAT reading comprehensions are the answers are very nuanced, okay? They are like testing your ability to understand the nuances of what you're reading. So sometimes it's not obvious what the answer is, it's nuanced. You go. I'm not going to go through the entire test, but this seems like an appropriate test to test my understanding of this passage right here. If we had more time, I would do this test more thoroughly. But yeah, I'm pleasantly surprised to see that it understands what I mean. And if you really want to accomplish this in the best condition, like in the most realistic condition, you could also time yourself. 45 minutes, I think it's very generous for such a small passage. So maybe you could try to do this in 15 minutes. That would be more realistic given the length of this passage right here. I believe an SAT test, give you more than just one passage like this. You could have maybe four or five of similar length passages. And I think I will leave it here for this lecture about test and quizzes. Okay. Now, in terms of limitation of these practices and tests that CPT can generate for you. The first one is that the questions that it will generate will test basic knowledge recall or memory, not really deep mastery of a topic. The second limitation is that CPT cannot really replicate the full experience of the real standardized exam. You know, when you are passing your ACT or your bacalaia if you're French, it's stressing. It's stressful. Like you have studied for weeks, sometimes months to get there, and there's a lot at stake. So yeah, these conditions cannot be simulated by an chat. Then the third limitation or, I would say, recommendation here is that you should always use other practice resources as well, combined with CGP, not solely rely on the test and quizzes generated by CGPT to evaluate your knowledge of a topic. So please do not misunderstand me here. Especially if you are one of our younger viewers, you're still at school, you have exams coming, and you're watching this. I am not suggesting that CG PT alone will get you through your exams and will help you pass this exam. That's not what I'm saying. Hard work and diligent study are still your tickets to success when it comes to exam. What I am saying, though, is that CJPiti can be a powerful ally to help you fixate the knowledge, review the topics, the material, and fast track your way to success with these exams. Okay.