Teaching Notes & Playlists
Turn primary research into ready-to-teach material in minutes.
Lucie Gadenne · Queen Mary University of London
Teaching Note
A one-page document built from a Faculti clip. It pulls together the scholar's argument, key definitions, key contributions, discussion questions, semantically matched related papers, and an citation — ready to hand to students, colleagues, or a CPD reviewer.
Playlist
Multiple Teaching Notes combined into a single sequence — built around a topic, a module, or a course week. Each section includes an citation and can be enriched with contributions, definitions, and discussion questions. Every claim traces back to a named scholar on video at a specific timestamp.
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Find any video on Faculti — search by topic, browse subject pages, or start from a contribution.
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Open the Teaching Agent panel on the clip page.
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Click Export Teaching Note.
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The note is generated: video reference, summary, key definitions, key contributions, discussion questions, related papers, and a citation. Download as a one-pager PDF.
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Open the Teaching Agent on any clip.
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Click Build a Playlist.
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Enter a topic — for example, "behavioural economics: nudging and choice architecture" or "the 2008 financial crisis: causes and aftermath."
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Faculti finds the most relevant and recent clips. Click + Contributions on any video to enrich it with key contributions, definitions, and discussion questions.
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Download the playlist as a multi-section PDF. Each video section includes a citation and any enrichment you added.
Use the one-pager as your own briefing before class — primary-source backed, with timestamped citations you can show students directly.
Print or share the PDF as pre-reading. Students arrive with the scholar's argument and the surrounding literature already in hand.
Build a Playlist for each week of a course. Each Teaching Note becomes a session anchor.
Send students a Playlist on a topic and ask them to identify the strongest contribution, the weakest evidence, or the gap between scholars.
Teaching Notes aren't only for classrooms. Researchers and policy teams use them as:
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A literature briefing on a topic, with named-scholar citations
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A reference document attached to internal reports
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A shareable artefact for stakeholders who need the substance without the full paper
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Source clip with timestamp and scholar attribution
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Plain-language summary of the scholar's argument
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Key definitions — field-specific terms explained in plain language
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Key contributions extracted from the clip, with timestamps
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Discussion questions — open-ended prompts for seminars and tutorials
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Related papers, semantically matched to the clip's argument
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Citation — copy-paste ready for reading lists
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Footer: institutional attribution and Faculti DOI
Open the Teaching Agent on any Faculti clip to get started.
Find a video