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AI Tool for High School

AI 3 Reads Protocol Generator for High School

High school math and science problems demand rigorous sense-making before calculation. The 3 Reads Protocol structures that sense-making, separating the context, the quantities, and the mathematical question into three purposeful reads. The AI generates complete protocols for algebra, precalculus, statistics, physics, and chemistry word problems in under 2 minutes.

2 min
Protocol generation time
3 reads
Structured problem reads
Gr. 9–12
Grade levels covered
All STEM
Subjects supported

How High School Teachers Use This

Algebra and Function Application Problems

Generate protocols for algebra word problems where students must model a real situation with an equation or function. The second read on quantities is the key step, identifying which quantity is the input and which is the output.

Statistics and Probability Scenarios

Statistics problems embed complex contextual scenarios. The protocol separates reading comprehension from statistical reasoning so students understand the study design before evaluating statistical claims.

Physics Problem Setup

Physics word problems require precise quantity identification, speed vs. velocity, force vs. acceleration, energy vs. power. The 3 Reads Protocol's second read specifically addresses this precision before any formula application.

Chemistry Stoichiometry Problems

Stoichiometry problems require identifying molar quantities, limiting reagents, and theoretical yields. Generate a protocol that separates the chemical scenario from the calculation setup.

Calculus Related Rates

Related rates problems are notoriously hard to set up. The protocol's second read on quantities (identifying which rates are given and which is unknown) is the essential step before any differentiation.

AP Exam Free-Response Practice

Use the protocol for AP-level free-response practice problems to build the careful reading habits that improve scores on multi-part problems where misreading the question is the most common error.

Frequently Asked Questions

AP free-response problems are multi-part and require careful reading to understand what each part is asking. The protocol builds the habit of reading the entire problem before starting, identifying all the quantities and all the questions asked. Students who rush to part (a) often miss information in part (c) that changes how (a) should be interpreted.

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