Fast Feedback System
Give meaningful feedback without writing essays on every paper
Detailed feedback matters, but writing individualized paragraphs on 150 papers is not sustainable. This recipe builds a coded feedback system that's fast for you and clear for students — so grading doesn't consume every evening.
INGREDIENTS
PROMPT
Build a Fast Feedback System for a high school teacher. Ask for assignment type (essays, lab reports, problem sets, projects, etc.), the five to ten most common student mistakes, grading volume (number of students and frequency), and current feedback approach. Output a coded feedback system with symbols or short codes mapped to specific actionable comments, a whole-class feedback template for addressing common patterns, a student-facing code reference sheet, and a revision workflow that requires students to respond to feedback before resubmitting.
How It Works
You provide your assignment type and the most common mistakes you see.
Your Claw creates a feedback code system — short symbols or codes mapped
to specific, actionable comments. You mark papers with codes, add one
brief personalized note, and deliver whole-class feedback for patterns.
Students get clear guidance. You get your evenings back.
What You Get
- A custom feedback code sheet tailored to your assignment type
- Codes mapped to specific, actionable improvement comments
- A whole-class feedback template for common patterns
- A revision workflow so students act on feedback instead of ignoring it
- A student-facing code reference sheet they can keep
Setup Steps
- Choose the assignment type (essays, lab reports, problem sets, projects, etc.)
- List the five to ten most common mistakes or issues you see
- Note your grading volume (how many students, how often)
- Run the recipe and review the code system
- Print the student-facing reference sheet and introduce the system
Tips
- Start with five codes max and add more only when needed
- The student reference sheet is critical — codes are useless if students can't decode them
- Whole-class feedback before returning papers saves repeat questions
- Pair with a required revision step to make feedback actually stick