Agent skill
tutorial-design
Design and write hands-on tutorials with progressive disclosure, exercises, and troubleshooting sections. Use when creating learning content, workshops, or step-by-step guides.
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/NickCrew/Claude-Cortex/tree/main/skills/tutorial-design
SKILL.md
Tutorial Design
Design and write hands-on tutorials that transform complex technical concepts into engaging, progressive learning experiences with exercises, checkpoints, and troubleshooting guidance.
When to Use This Skill
- Writing a getting-started tutorial for a library, API, or tool
- Creating workshop materials for team training or conferences
- Building multi-part learning series with progressive difficulty
- Designing coding exercises with self-assessment checkpoints
- Converting existing documentation into guided learning content
- Creating quick-start guides that get users productive fast
Quick Reference
| Resource | Purpose | Load when |
|---|---|---|
references/design-patterns.md |
Progressive disclosure patterns, exercise types, checkpoint design, difficulty calibration, prerequisite mapping | Planning tutorial structure or designing exercises |
Workflow Overview
Phase 1: Objectives → Define learning outcomes, prerequisites, and audience
Phase 2: Decompose → Break concepts into atomic, sequenced steps
Phase 3: Design → Create exercises, checkpoints, and troubleshooting tips
Phase 4: Write → Produce tutorial content with runnable examples
Phase 5: Validate → Test the tutorial path end-to-end
Phase 1: Define Learning Objectives
Every tutorial starts with clear outcomes.
Opening Section Template
## What You'll Learn
- [Specific, measurable outcome 1]
- [Specific, measurable outcome 2]
- [Specific, measurable outcome 3]
## Prerequisites
- [Required knowledge or setup]
- [Tools needed]
## Time Estimate
~[X] minutes
## What You'll Build
[Brief description or screenshot of the final result]
Writing good objectives:
- Use action verbs: "build", "configure", "debug", "deploy" — not "understand" or "learn about"
- Make them testable: the reader should be able to verify they achieved each outcome
- Scope realistically: 3-5 objectives per tutorial
Phase 2: Concept Decomposition
Break the topic into atomic learning steps.
Sequencing Rules
- One concept per section — never introduce two new ideas at once
- Dependency order — concepts must build on what came before
- Concrete before abstract — show the working example, then explain the theory
- Simple before complex — start with the minimal version, layer complexity
Concept Map
Before writing, sketch a dependency graph:
[Prerequisites] → [Core concept A] → [Core concept B]
↘ [Variation 1]
[Core concept A] → [Core concept C] → [Advanced topic]
Each node becomes a section. Dependencies become the section order.
Phase 3: Design Exercises and Checkpoints
Exercise Types
| Type | Difficulty | When to use |
|---|---|---|
| Fill-in-the-blank | Low | Reinforce syntax after an example |
| Debug challenge | Medium | Teach error reading and common mistakes |
| Extension task | Medium | Add a feature to working code |
| From scratch | High | Build based on requirements only |
| Refactoring | High | Improve existing implementation |
Checkpoint Pattern
After every major section, insert a checkpoint:
### Checkpoint
At this point you should have:
- [ ] A running server on port 3000
- [ ] The `/health` endpoint returning `{ "status": "ok" }`
- [ ] Server logs showing incoming requests
**If something's wrong**, see the [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting) section below.
Troubleshooting Sections
For every section, anticipate 2-3 common errors:
### Troubleshooting
**Error: `EADDRINUSE: address already in use`**
Another process is using port 3000. Run `lsof -i :3000` to find it,
then stop it or change your port.
**Error: `Cannot find module 'express'`**
You haven't installed dependencies yet. Run `npm install` in the project root.
Phase 4: Write the Tutorial
Section Structure (for each concept)
- Brief intro (1-2 sentences) — what this section covers and why it matters
- Minimal example — complete, runnable code showing the concept
- Line-by-line explanation — walk through the important parts
- Try it — tell the reader to run the code and what to expect
- Extend it — optional exercise to deepen understanding
- Troubleshooting — common errors for this section
Writing Principles
- Show, then explain — code first, theory second
- Frequent validation — readers should run code every 2-3 minutes
- Fail forward — include intentional errors to teach debugging
- Incremental complexity — each step adds one thing to the previous
- Copy-paste friendly — examples must work when pasted directly
Content Elements
Code blocks must:
- Be complete and runnable (no
...elisions in critical paths) - Include expected output in a separate block
- Use meaningful variable names
- Have inline comments only where non-obvious
Explanations should:
- Connect to real-world use cases
- Provide the "why" behind each step
- Use analogies to familiar concepts
- Anticipate the reader's "but what about...?" questions
Closing Section
## Summary
You've learned how to:
- [Outcome 1 restated]
- [Outcome 2 restated]
## Next Steps
- [Natural follow-on tutorial or topic]
- [Related documentation]
- [Community resources]
Phase 5: Validate
Before publishing, test the entire tutorial path:
- Follow every step from a clean environment
- Run every code example and verify output matches
- Trigger every troubleshooting scenario at least once
- Time the tutorial — does it match the estimate?
- Have someone unfamiliar with the topic attempt it
Tutorial Formats
| Format | Duration | When to use |
|---|---|---|
| Quick Start | 5 min | First contact, get running fast |
| Deep Dive | 30-60 min | Comprehensive single-topic exploration |
| Workshop Series | Multi-part | Progressive learning across sessions |
| Cookbook | Variable | Problem-solution pairs, non-linear reading |
| Interactive Lab | 15-45 min | Hands-on environment with guided steps |
Anti-Patterns
- Introducing concepts before they are needed ("you'll use this later")
- Showing code snippets that cannot run standalone
- Assuming knowledge not listed in prerequisites
- Walls of text without code breaks
- Exercises without solutions (even collapsed/hidden ones)
- Skipping the "why" and only showing the "how"
Recommended Agent Skills
Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.
claude-consult
Consult Claude specialist agents during implementation for codebase understanding, pattern checking, security review, debugging help, and more. Use this skill whenever you're unsure about conventions, stuck on a failure, or need expert input before writing code. Does not replace the formal review gates in agent-loops — this is for mid-implementation consultation.
doc-quality-review
Assess documentation quality across readability, consistency, audience fit, and prose clarity. Produces a scored review with actionable findings. This skill should be used before releases, during doc reviews, or when documentation feels unclear or inconsistent.
event-driven-architecture
Event-driven architecture patterns with event sourcing, CQRS, and message-driven communication. Use when designing distributed systems, microservices communication, or systems requiring eventual consistency and scalability.
prompt-engineering
Optimize prompts for LLMs and AI systems with structured techniques, evaluation patterns, and synthetic test data generation. Use when building AI features, improving agent performance, or crafting system prompts.
compliance-audit
Regulatory compliance auditing across GDPR, HIPAA, PCI DSS, SOC 2, and ISO frameworks with automated evidence collection and gap analysis. Use when conducting compliance assessments, preparing for certifications, or implementing regulatory controls.
react-performance-optimization
React performance optimization patterns using memoization, code splitting, and efficient rendering strategies. Use when optimizing slow React applications, reducing bundle size, or improving user experience with large datasets.
Didn't find tool you were looking for?