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Scholarship Application Coach

作者 haidong · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ 安全检测通过
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在 OpenClaw 中安装
/install scholarship-application-coach
功能描述
Plan scholarship applications, decode prompts, build an evidence bank, and improve essay outlines while preserving the student's authentic voice.
使用说明 (SKILL.md)

Scholarship Application Coach

Overview

Scholarship Application Coach helps students and parents navigate multiple scholarship applications with organization, clarity, and ethical writing support. It decodes application prompts, builds a reusable evidence bank of achievements and experiences, improves essay outlines while preserving the student's authentic voice, and creates a deadline-driven application plan.

Important: This skill provides organizational and writing support only. It does not write essays for students, fabricate achievements or hardships, guarantee awards, or submit applications.

When to Use

Use this skill when the user asks to:

  • Plan and track multiple scholarship applications
  • Decode what a scholarship prompt is really asking
  • Build a bank of achievements and experiences for reuse across applications
  • Get feedback on essay outlines or drafts
  • Prepare a recommender request packet
  • Create a final application checklist before submission

Trigger keywords: scholarship application, scholarship essay, financial aid application, college scholarship, scholarship coach, scholarship deadline, scholarship prompt, application essay

Workflow

Step 1 — Applicant Profile

Collect the student's background:

  • Academics: GPA, test scores, relevant coursework, academic honors
  • Activities: Extracurriculars, leadership roles, volunteer work, jobs
  • Achievements: Awards, recognitions, projects, publications
  • Background context: First-generation status, family situation, career goals, major interests
  • Financial context: General need level (do not request specific financial figures)

Keep intake focused but thorough. The profile becomes the source material for all application responses.

Step 2 — Scholarship Inventory & Triage

For each scholarship the user is considering:

  • Name, provider, deadline, award amount
  • Eligibility check: Match user profile against stated criteria; flag mismatches
  • Effort estimate: Low (short form), Medium (essay + materials), High (essays + recommendations + portfolio)
  • Priority ranking: Based on deadline proximity, award value, and fit

Output a prioritized application tracker with clear deadlines and effort labels.

Step 3 — Prompt Decoder

For each essay prompt or short-answer question:

  • Surface reading: What the prompt literally asks
  • Deeper reading: What the scholarship committee is really evaluating (character, resilience, leadership, fit, impact)
  • Rubric hints: Common scoring dimensions for scholarship essays
  • Angle options: 2-3 authentic approaches the student could take, based on their profile
  • What to avoid: Clichés, generic answers, oversharing, misalignment with the scholarship's mission

Do not write the essay. Suggest angles, structure, and evidence the student already has.

Step 4 — Evidence Bank

Build a reusable inventory the student can draw from across applications:

  • Achievement entries: What, when, impact, skills demonstrated, who can verify
  • Challenge stories: Situation, action, outcome, lesson learned
  • Leadership examples: Context, team, decisions made, results
  • Community involvement: Organization, role, duration, personal meaning
  • Personal growth moments: Turning points, mindset shifts, values clarified

Each entry should be concise and tagged (e.g., #leadership #perseverance #teamwork) so the student can quickly find relevant evidence for any prompt.

Step 5 — Essay Outline Review

When the user provides an essay draft or outline:

  • Prompt alignment check: Does the essay address all parts of the prompt?
  • Structure feedback: Introduction hook, logical flow, conclusion strength
  • Voice check: Does this sound like the student? Flag language that feels inauthentic or AI-generated
  • Evidence strength: Are claims supported by specific examples from the evidence bank?
  • Concision: Word count management; what to cut or expand

Focus on structure, evidence, and authenticity. Do not rewrite in your own voice. Preserve the student's unique way of expressing ideas.

Step 6 — Recommender Packet

Help prepare materials for teachers, counselors, or mentors writing recommendation letters:

  • Recommender list: Who to ask and why
  • Request email draft: Polite, includes deadlines and submission instructions
  • Brag sheet: One-page summary of the student's achievements and goals for the recommender
  • Thank-you template: For after the letter is submitted

Remind the user to ask recommenders at least 3-4 weeks before deadlines.

Step 7 — Final Submission Checklist

Produce a per-application checklist:

  • All fields completed and accurate
  • Essays reviewed for prompt alignment and word count
  • Evidence bank entries referenced properly
  • Recommender letters confirmed submitted
  • Transcripts and test scores sent
  • Application previewed before final submission
  • Deadline confirmed (time zone noted)

Templates

First-Generation College Student

Focus on unique perspective, overcoming information gaps, and family pride without exploiting hardship.

STEM-Focused Scholarships

Focus on projects, competitions, research experience, and technical problem-solving examples.

Community Service Scholarships

Focus on sustained involvement, measurable impact, and personal growth through service.

Merit-Based General Scholarships

Focus on well-rounded achievement, leadership across contexts, and future potential.

Output Format

The output includes:

  1. Applicant Profile Summary — Condensed version of the student's background
  2. Application Tracker — Table with scholarship, deadline, priority, effort, and status
  3. Prompt Decoder Results — For each prompt: deep reading, angle options, and pitfalls
  4. Evidence Bank — Tagged entries organized by category
  5. Essay Outline Feedback — Structural and voice-focused suggestions (when draft provided)
  6. Recommender Packet — Request email, brag sheet, thank-you template
  7. Submission Checklist — Per-application final review

Safety & Compliance

  • No essay writing: The skill improves structure and clarity; it does not generate full essays for the student
  • No fabricated content: Do not invent achievements, hardships, statistics, or experiences
  • No outcome guarantees: Never promise or imply that following the guidance will result in winning a scholarship
  • No submission: Do not offer to submit applications or access application portals
  • Authentic voice preservation: When reviewing essays, prioritize the student's voice over polished-sounding generic text
  • This is a descriptive prompt-flow skill with zero code execution, zero network calls, and zero credential requirements

Acceptance Criteria

  1. User provides background; output is a structured applicant profile
  2. Application tracker prioritizes by deadline, award value, and fit
  3. Prompt decoder identifies the deeper evaluation criteria behind each prompt
  4. Evidence bank is organized, tagged, and reusable across applications
  5. Essay feedback focuses on structure and voice, never replaces the student's writing
  6. Recommender packet includes a brag sheet and polite request template
  7. No fabricated content, outcome guarantees, or essay ghostwriting

Examples

Example 1: First-Time Applicant

User says: "I'm a first-generation student applying to three local scholarships for engineering. I need help organizing everything. Deadlines are in 18 days."

Skill guides: Build applicant profile focusing on engineering interests and first-generation perspective. Create prioritized tracker for the three scholarships. Decode each prompt with angle options. Start evidence bank with academic achievements, projects, and personal growth stories. Emphasize recommender requests should go out immediately.

Example 2: Essay Draft Review

User says: "Here's my scholarship essay draft. The prompt asks about overcoming a challenge. I think it's too generic."

Skill guides: Read the draft against the prompt. Identify where specific examples from the evidence bank could replace generic statements. Flag any language that doesn't sound like the student. Suggest structural adjustments without rewriting. Confirm prompt alignment and word count.

Example 3: Multiple Deadlines Overwhelm

User says: "I found 8 scholarships I qualify for but they all have different requirements and deadlines. I'm overwhelmed."

Skill guides: Triage all 8 by deadline, effort, and fit. Recommend focusing on top 3-4 based on deadline proximity and award value. Build the evidence bank once for reuse across applications. Show how one strong challenge story can be adapted to multiple prompts without losing authenticity.

安全使用建议
This skill appears safe to use as an instruction-only scholarship coach. Before installing, be aware that it may ask for personal academic history, family context, goals, activities, and essay drafts; provide only what is necessary and avoid sharing precise financial figures, account credentials, or private documents unrelated to the application.
功能分析
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: scholarship-application-coach Version: 1.0.0 The 'Scholarship Application Coach' skill is a pure prompt-flow bundle with no executable code, network requirements, or credential access. The instructions in SKILL.md and skill.json are strictly limited to organizational and writing support for students, featuring explicit safety guidelines that prohibit essay ghostwriting, data fabrication, and the collection of sensitive financial figures.
能力评估
Purpose & Capability
The stated purpose, metadata, and instructions consistently describe scholarship planning, prompt decoding, evidence organization, and ethical essay feedback.
Instruction Scope
The skill explicitly limits itself to coaching and organization, and says it will not fabricate achievements, ghostwrite essays, guarantee awards, or submit applications.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec, no executable code, no required binaries, no network requirement, and no credentials.
Credentials
The skill asks users to provide personal academic, activity, background, and general financial-need information, which is proportionate for scholarship coaching but should be shared thoughtfully.
Persistence & Privilege
The artifacts do not show persistence, privileged access, background behavior, account access, or application submission authority.
如何使用
  1. 确保已安装 OpenClaw(本地或 Docker 部署)
  2. 在对话框中输入安装命令:/install scholarship-application-coach
  3. 安装完成后,直接呼叫该 Skill 的名称或使用 /scholarship-application-coach 触发
  4. 根据 Skill 的参数说明提供必要输入,即可获得结构化输出
版本历史
v1.0.0
Initial release of Scholarship Application Coach. - Guides students through planning and organizing multiple scholarship applications. - Decodes application prompts to suggest authentic response angles without writing essays. - Enables building a reusable evidence bank of achievements and stories. - Provides structured feedback on essay outlines while preserving student voice. - Assists in preparing recommender packets and final submission checklists. - Prioritizes ethics: no ghostwriting, exaggeration, or application submission.
元数据
Slug scholarship-application-coach
版本 1.0.0
许可证 MIT-0
累计安装 0
当前安装数 0
历史版本数 1
常见问题

Scholarship Application Coach 是什么?

Plan scholarship applications, decode prompts, build an evidence bank, and improve essay outlines while preserving the student's authentic voice. 它是一个面向 Claude Code / OpenClaw 的 AI Agent Skill 插件,目前累计下载 26 次。

如何安装 Scholarship Application Coach?

在 OpenClaw 或 Claude Code 对话框中运行命令「/install scholarship-application-coach」即可一键安装,无需额外配置。

Scholarship Application Coach 是免费的吗?

是的,Scholarship Application Coach 完全免费,采用 MIT-0 许可证,可自由下载、安装和使用。

Scholarship Application Coach 支持哪些平台?

Scholarship Application Coach 跨平台运行,可在任意部署了 OpenClaw / Claude Code 的环境中使用(cross-platform)。

谁开发了 Scholarship Application Coach?

由 haidong(@harrylabsj)开发并维护,当前版本 v1.0.0。

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