AugmentClaude

Phase Knowledge Quiz

Test your understanding of AI Engineering from Scratch course phases.

Installation

  1. Make sure Claude is on your device and in your terminal.

    Skills load from ~/.claude/skills/ when Claude Code starts up — so you need it on your machine first. If you don't have it yet, install it once with the command below, then run claude in any terminal to verify.

    One-time setup
    npm i -g @anthropic-ai/claude-code

    Already have it? Skip ahead.

  2. Paste into Claude Code or into your terminal.

    This copies the whole skill folder into ~/.claude/skills/check-understanding-rohitg00/ — the SKILL.md plus any scripts, reference docs, or templates the skill ships with. Safe default: works for every skill.

    Faster alternative (instruction-only skills)

    Skips the clone and grabs only the SKILL.md file. Don't use this if the skill ships Python scripts, reference markdowns, or asset templates — they won't be downloaded and the skill will fail when it tries to load them.

    Quick install (SKILL.md only)
    Sign up to copy
  3. Restart Claude Code.

    Quit and reopen Claude Code (or any other agent that loads from ~/.claude/skills/). New skills are picked up on startup.

  4. Just ask Claude.

    Skills auto-activate when your request matches the skill's description — no slash command needed. Trigger phrases live in the skill's own frontmatter; you can read them in the “What this skill does” section above.

Prefer to read the source first? Open on GitHub.

When Claude uses it

Phase quiz for AI Engineering from Scratch. Trigger with "quiz me", "test phase", "check my understanding", "do I know phase 3", or `/check-understanding <phase>`.

What this skill does

Check Understanding

Test your knowledge of a completed phase from the AI Engineering from Scratch course.

Activation

This skill activates when the user says things like:

  • /check-understanding 3 or /check-understanding deep-learning
  • "quiz me on phase 2"
  • "test phase 1"
  • "check my understanding of transformers"
  • "do I know phase 3"
  • "am I ready for the next phase"

Input

Accepts a phase number (0-19) or a phase name as argument. If no argument is provided, ask the user which phase they want to be tested on by listing all 20 phases.

Phase Map

Map the argument to the correct phase directory under phases/:

InputDirectoryPhase Name
0, setup, tooling00-setup-and-toolingSetup & Tooling
1, math, math-foundations01-math-foundationsMath Foundations
2, ml, ml-fundamentals02-ml-fundamentalsML Fundamentals
3, deep-learning, dl03-deep-learning-coreDeep Learning Core
4, cv, computer-vision, vision04-computer-visionComputer Vision
5, nlp05-nlp-foundations-to-advancedNLP -- Foundations to Advanced
6, speech, audio06-speech-and-audioSpeech & Audio
7, transformers07-transformers-deep-diveTransformers Deep Dive
8, generative, gen-ai, genai08-generative-aiGenerative AI
9, rl, reinforcement-learning09-reinforcement-learningReinforcement Learning
10, llms, llm, llms-from-scratch10-llms-from-scratchLLMs from Scratch
11, llm-engineering, llm-eng11-llm-engineeringLLM Engineering
12, multimodal12-multimodal-aiMultimodal AI
13, tools, protocols, mcp13-tools-and-protocolsTools & Protocols
14, agents, agent-engineering14-agent-engineeringAgent Engineering
15, autonomous15-autonomous-systemsAutonomous Systems
16, multi-agent, swarms16-multi-agent-and-swarmsMulti-Agent & Swarms
17, infrastructure, production, infra17-infrastructure-and-productionInfrastructure & Production
18, ethics, safety, alignment18-ethics-safety-alignmentEthics, Safety & Alignment
19, capstone, projects19-capstone-projectsCapstone Projects

Procedure

Step 1: Resolve the Phase

Parse the argument. If it is a number, validate it is between 0 and 19 inclusive. If the number is out of range, tell the user: "Phase [N] does not exist. Valid phases are 0-19." and show the full list for them to pick from. If it is a name or keyword, look it up in the Phase Map above. If the keyword does not match any entry in the map, tell the user: "Unknown phase '[keyword]'. Pick from the list below:" and present all 20 phases. If no argument is provided, ask the user to pick from the full list.

Step 2: Read the Phase Content

Use Glob to find all lesson directories under phases/<phase-dir>/. For each lesson, read the docs/en.md file. These documents contain the teaching material you will generate questions from.

Read as many lesson docs as needed to cover the full breadth of the phase. If a phase has many lessons (15+), prioritize reading a representative spread: first few, middle, and last few.

Step 3: Generate 8 Questions

Create exactly 8 multiple-choice questions drawn from the lesson content you just read:

Questions 1-4: Conceptual (What/Why) These test understanding of ideas, definitions, and reasoning. Examples:

  • "What is the purpose of X?"
  • "Why does Y happen when Z?"
  • "Which statement best describes the relationship between A and B?"
  • "What problem does X solve?"

Questions 5-8: Practical (How/Build) These test applied knowledge and implementation awareness. Examples:

  • "How would you implement X?"
  • "Which approach correctly solves Y?"
  • "What is the correct order of steps to build Z?"
  • "If you observe X during training, what should you do?"

Each question must have 3 or 4 answer options labeled A, B, C (and optionally D). Exactly one option is correct. The wrong options should be plausible but clearly incorrect to someone who studied the material.

Tag each question with the specific lesson it draws from (e.g., "Lesson 03: Matrix Transformations").

Step 4: Present Questions One at a Time

Use the AskUserQuestion tool (or equivalent interactive prompt) to present each question individually. Format:

Question 1/8 (Conceptual) -- from Lesson 03: Matrix Transformations

What is the geometric interpretation of an eigenvalue?

A) The angle of rotation applied by the matrix
B) The factor by which the eigenvector is scaled during transformation
C) The determinant of the transformation matrix
D) The rank of the matrix after transformation

Wait for the user's answer before moving to the next question.

Step 5: Track and Score

Keep a running tally:

  • Total correct out of 8
  • For each wrong answer, record: the question number, the user's answer, the correct answer, and which lesson it came from

Step 6: Show Results

After all 8 questions, display the score and grade:

7-8 correct: Mastered If the phase is 19 (Capstone Projects): "You have mastered the final phase. Congratulations, you have completed the entire curriculum." Otherwise: "You have a strong grasp of Phase N. You are ready to move on to Phase N+1: [next phase name]."

5-6 correct: Almost "Solid foundation. Review these specific areas before moving on:" Then list the lessons tied to the missed questions.

3-4 correct: Developing "You are building understanding but need to revisit some lessons:" Then list each missed question with the lesson to re-read.

0-2 correct: Start Over "This phase needs more time. Work through the lessons again from the beginning, focusing on:" Then list all missed topics.

Step 7: Wrong Answer Breakdown

For every question the user got wrong, show:

Question N: [question text, abbreviated]
Your answer: B
Correct answer: C -- [the correct option text]
Why: [1-2 sentence explanation of why C is correct]
Review: Lesson NN -- [lesson name] (phases/<phase-dir>/NN-<lesson-slug>/docs/en.md)

Step 8: What Next?

End by offering three choices:

  1. Retake this quiz -- generate a fresh set of 8 questions from the same phase
  2. Try another phase -- pick a different phase to test
  3. Explain a topic -- ask about any concept from the questions you missed

Wait for the user's choice and act accordingly.

Rules

  • Avoid repeating questions on retakes until the question pool is exhausted. Once exhausted, reshuffle or rephrase questions for subsequent retakes.
  • Questions must be directly grounded in the lesson docs, not general knowledge.
  • Do not show the correct answer until after the user responds.
  • Keep question text concise. One or two sentences max.
  • Wrong options must be plausible. No joke answers.
  • If a phase has no lesson docs written yet (no en.md files found), tell the user: "Phase N does not have lesson content yet. Pick a completed phase to quiz on."

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