Use when asked to review, edit, or fact-check any written document, draft, memo, email, or report — invoked only via /eddie command
Comprehensive class preparation for a law school lecture session. Performs three tasks: (1) checks slide-to-reading alignment and pacing, (2) checks class problem alignment with readings and slide content, and (3) produces a lecture guide document. Use this skill whenever asked to "prep a class", "prepare for class", "class prep", "get class ready", "check everything for class [N]", or any request that combines slide review, problem review, and lecture guide creation for a single class session. Also trigger when asked to do a "full review" or "complete check" of class materials, or when preparing materials for an upcoming lecture. This skill supersedes the lecture-slide-reviewer skill when all three outputs are requested together. Always use this skill rather than doing class prep steps freehand.
Revise and create class problems for a law school course. Use when asked to create, update, or revise class problems, exercises, or hypotheticals for any law course. Trigger phrases include "class problem", "update the problem", "create a problem for", "revise the hypothetical", or references to specific class sessions needing problems.
Draft and produce formatted Word document (.docx) general documents - proposals, reports, briefing docs, white papers, and other formal written materials - in Penn Carey Law style. Use this skill whenever the user asks to write, draft, or create a document that is not a memo or email: proposals, policy documents, reports, briefing materials, white papers, or any substantive standalone written work. Trigger phrases include write a proposal, draft a document, create a report, briefing doc, policy document, white paper, or any request to produce a formal standalone document. Use the law-memo skill instead for memos specifically.
Draft emails, memos, and messages in your voice. Use when asked to draft, write, or compose any email or professional communication for [Your Name]. Trigger phrases include "draft an email", "write a reply", "compose a message", "draft a decline", "write to", "email about", or any request to produce written communication on the user's behalf.
Generate assessment-science-grounded essay exam questions for law school courses. Use when asked to create essay questions, issue spotters, exam essays, or essay fact patterns for law school exams. Trigger phrases include "essay question", "essay exam", "issue spotter", "write an essay", "exam essay", "generate an essay", or any request to create law school essay exam questions. Also trigger when asked to create cross-doctrinal fact patterns, grading rubrics, or model answers for law school essay exams. Supports course presets for quick setup. Always use this skill rather than generating essay questions freehand — it enforces assessment-science quality controls including SOLO taxonomy layering, construct alignment to course materials, and rubrics designed for AI-assisted grading.
Generate high-quality multiple choice exam questions for any law school course. Use when asked to create MCQ exam questions, practice questions, or question banks for law school exams. Trigger phrases include "exam questions", "multiple choice", "MCQ", "practice questions", "question bank", "generate questions", or references to creating law exam content. Also trigger when asked to create narrative-based or fact-pattern-based multiple choice questions for any doctrinal law course including IP, contracts, torts, con law, civ pro, etc. Supports course presets for quick setup. Always use this skill rather than generating exam questions freehand — it enforces critical quality controls including distractor validation, cognitive taxonomy tagging, and coverage balancing derived from the psychometric research literature.
Draft and produce formatted Word document (.docx) memos in Penn Carey Law style. Use this skill whenever the user asks to write, draft, or create a memo, memorandum, or formal internal document for faculty, committees, or the Dean's office. Trigger phrases include "write a memo", "draft a memo", "memo to faculty", "memo to EPC", "memorandum", or any request to produce a formal internal communication as a document. Always use this skill — do not attempt to format or draft memos freehand without consulting it first.