How to Design Your Own Evaluation Character on Redmenta

How to Design Your Own Evaluation Character on Redmenta

One of the most exciting features of Redmenta is the ability to design your own Evaluation Character, a customized AI persona that interacts with students in feedback, assessment, and motivation. Think of it as your digital teaching assistant: it can be warm and encouraging, sharp and challenging, or calm and reassuring, depending on the learning atmosphere you want to create.

Below, you’ll find a step-by-step guide to help you design an evaluation character that fits your teaching goals.

Step 1: Choose a Goal

Every effective character starts with a clear purpose. Ask yourself: What do I want this character to achieve with my students?

💡 Example: If you’re teaching younger students, you might choose a playful motivator. For older students preparing for exams, a serious but supportive tone may work best.

Step 2: Pick Tone, Style, and Format

Next, decide how your character communicates. This is where personality comes in.

💡 Example: A “Coach” character could use a motivational tone with short, energetic phrases (“You’re on the right track! Try refining your argument.”). A “Mentor” character might provide longer, reflective feedback.

Step 3: Define Vocabulary

Your word choices will shape how students experience your character.

💡 Example: Instead of saying, “Your syntactic structure is flawed,” your reassuring character might say, “This sentence could flow better, try connecting your ideas with a linking phrase.”

Step 4: Test and Refine

No design is perfect the first time. After trying out your character in a worksheet or quiz:

💡 Example: You may find that your “Challenger” character works well with high achievers but overwhelms beginners. In that case, refine or create a second character for beginners.

Pro Tips: Writing Prompts That Work Well with AI

Designing an evaluation character is not just about the personality, it’s also about giving AI the right instructions. Here are some expert tips:

  1. Be specific: Instead of writing to AI “give feedback,” write “give one suggestion to improve clarity.”

  2. Set limits: Ask for feedback in 2–3 sentences so students don’t get overwhelmed.

  3. Model positivity: Balance critique with encouragement.

  4. Use scaffolding: Ask the AI to provide hints rather than full answers, keeping students engaged.

Example Prompts for Your Character

Here are some ready-to-use prompts you can adapt for your Evaluation Character:

The Motivator (Friendly Coach): Give feedback in a positive, energetic tone. Start with one praise point and then one small, achievable suggestion. Keep it under 30 words.

The Challenger (Critical Thinker): Ask the student one thought-provoking follow-up question. Provide one piece of feedback that pushes them to go deeper, using formal but respectful language.

The Reassurer (Supportive Guide): Give feedback in a calm, encouraging tone. Begin with a reassuring phrase, then suggest one gentle improvement using simple, clear words.

The Mentor (Reflective Advisor): Provide feedback in a reflective, teacherly tone. Offer one positive observation and one recommendation for improvement. Use complete sentences and academic vocabulary.

The Examiner (Concise Evaluator): Give direct, exam-style feedback. Point out one strength and one weakness. Keep the response under 20 words.

💡 Tip: Try these prompts in practice, then tweak the tone and length until your character matches your classroom needs.

Why Your Character Matters

Your Evaluation Character can become a signature element of your teaching style on Redmenta. Whether it’s a motivational coach, a wise mentor, or a calm guide, the key is consistency: students quickly learn to trust and respond to a familiar voice. With the right design, you’ll create not just an AI assistant, but a learning partner that extends your classroom presence.

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