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Course websites are the most feature-rich output type in EduArc. After your initial content is generated, this guide provides specific prompts for adding pages, including interactive elements, and organizing your site.

Adding Pages

New Pages

Add a new page about [topic].
Examples:
  • “Add a new page about quadratic equations”
  • “Add an introduction page that explains what this course covers”
  • “Add a glossary page with all the key terms”

Page Structure

Add a page with [structure elements].
Examples:
  • “Add a page with an overview, three main sections, and a summary”
  • “Add a lesson page with objectives, content, examples, and exercises”
  • “Add a reference page with tables and quick-lookup information”

Adding Interactive Elements

Quizzes

Add a quiz with [number] [question type] questions about [topic].
Examples:
  • “Add a quiz with 10 multiple choice questions about cell division”
  • “Add a self-check quiz with 5 true/false questions at the end”
  • “Add a practice test with mixed question types worth 50 marks”
Quiz questions can include immediate feedback, hints, and explanations for wrong answers.

Flashcards

Add flashcards for [content].
Examples:
  • “Add flashcards for all the key terms in this chapter”
  • “Add a flashcard set for the French vocabulary”
  • “Add definition flashcards that students can use for revision”

Interactive Examples

Add an interactive [type] that shows [concept].
Examples:
  • “Add an interactive example where students can change values and see results”
  • “Add a step-by-step walkthrough of solving this equation”
  • “Add a drag-and-drop activity for matching terms to definitions”

Using the Question Database

EduArc has access to 22,000+ exam questions. You can add them to your course:
Find [number] [exam board] questions about [topic].
Examples:
  • “Find 5 IGCSE physics questions about Newton’s laws”
  • “Add 3 A-Level calculus questions with worked solutions”
  • “Find STEP questions about integration and add them as challenge problems”

Filtering Questions

Find questions that are [difficulty/type/topic].
Examples:
  • “Find easier questions for the warm-up section”
  • “Add competition-level problems for advanced students”
  • “Find questions specifically about graph transformations”

Adding Visual Content

Diagrams and Figures

Add a diagram showing [concept].
Examples:
  • “Add a diagram showing the structure of a plant cell”
  • “Add a flowchart for the decision-making process”
  • “Add a graph showing the relationship between force and acceleration”

Chemistry Structures

Add the molecular structure of [compound].
Examples:
  • “Add the molecular structure of glucose”
  • “Show the benzene ring structure with labels”
  • “Add diagrams comparing the structures of DNA and RNA bases”

Tables and Comparisons

Add a table comparing [items].
Examples:
  • “Add a table comparing mitosis and meiosis”
  • “Add a comparison table for the three states of matter”
  • “Add a summary table of all the formulas in this chapter”

Organizing Content

Organize the content into [structure].
Examples:
  • “Organize the content into weekly modules”
  • “Add a sidebar with chapters and subsections”
  • “Group related topics together in the navigation”

Moving Content

Move [element] to [location].
Examples:
  • “Move the examples before the theory explanation”
  • “Put the summary at the beginning as a preview”
  • “Move all practice problems to a separate exercises page”

Linking Pages

Add links between [pages/sections].
Examples:
  • “Add ‘Next’ and ‘Previous’ links between lessons”
  • “Link the glossary terms to their first appearance in the content”
  • “Add cross-references between related topics”

Styling and Formatting

Text Formatting

Format [element] as [style].
Examples:
  • “Put key definitions in highlighted boxes”
  • “Format all theorems with a distinct background color”
  • “Make important warnings stand out with an alert style”

Layout

Use [layout] for [content].
Examples:
  • “Use two columns for the comparison section”
  • “Add a sidebar with quick facts”
  • “Put the example and explanation side by side”

Complete Workflow Example

After uploading your notes and selecting the Course Website template, EduArc generates your site. Here’s how you might refine it:
1

Review generated content

Browse through the generated site and identify areas for improvement
2

Reorganize structure

“Organize this into 5 chapters with an introduction and summary for each”
3

Add interactivity

“Add a quiz at the end of each chapter with 10 questions”
4

Enhance with resources

“Add molecular structures for all compounds mentioned in chapter 2”
5

Add practice

“Find 20 A-Level organic chemistry questions and add them to a practice test page”
6

Final polish

“Add a glossary page and link all key terms to it”

Tips for Course Websites

Start Simple

Review the generated structure first, then add interactive elements

Test Navigation

Make sure students can easily find their way through the content

Preview Often

Check how your site looks after each major change

Think Mobile

Your students may view on phones—keep layouts simple