Teacher Onboarding Guide
Welcome
We’re building a system that helps teachers turn explanations into clear, visual educational videos.
•
Show visual scenes
•
Use analogies
•
Create animated explanations
What You’ll Do
You provide:
•
The explanation
•
The teaching logic
•
The visual intent
The system will:
•
Generate scenes
•
Create visuals
•
Produce the final video
Step 1 — Prepare Your Explanation
Before using the system, define one clear concept.
Good Example
Topic: Free Radical Substitution
•
Explanation: Chlorine replaces hydrogen in methane under UV light
•
Analogy: Like swapping players in a team
•
Steps: initiation → propagation → termination
Avoid
•
“Explain organic chemistry”
•
Too broad or unclear
Step 2 — Write Your Script
Keep it:
•
Short (1–2 minutes)
•
Structured
•
Conversational
Suggested Structure
1.
Hook (Why it matters)
2.
Concept explanation
3.
Analogy
4.
Step-by-step breakdown
5.
Summary
Step 3 — Design Your Scenes (MOST IMPORTANT)
This is where your teaching skill matters most.
•
What should be seen, not just said
Scene Template (Copy & Use)
Scene #:
•
•
•
•
Example
Script:
“Chlorine breaks into radicals under UV light”
Scene:
•
UV light shining
•
Cl₂ molecule splitting
•
Energy/glow effect
If you cannot clearly imagine the scene, the AI will guess (often incorrectly)
Step 4 — Review AI-Generated Scenes
You must check:
•
•
•
Common Issues
•
Incorrect molecule structures
•
Wrong process order
•
Generic visuals
You are the validator, not the AI
Step 5 — Generate Video
Once scenes are approved:
•
AI generates visuals
•
Scenes are combined
•
Voiceover is added
Step 6 — Add Voice (Optional)
Options:
•
AI voice
•
Your own voice
Best Practice
•
Speak naturally
•
Match tone with visuals
•
Don’t read like a script
Step 7 — Final Review
Before publishing, check:
•
Flow of scenes
•
Timing
•
Visual clarity
•
Student understanding
“Can a student understand this without my help?”
Teaching Tips
1. Use Analogies
•
Chemistry → Lego blocks
•
Physics → real-world motion
2. Keep It Visual
Avoid:
•
Long text
•
Abstract-only explanations
3. One Idea per Scene
Don’t overload visuals

