Criterion ID
int64
22
6.14k
Task ID
int64
4
157
Prompt
stringclasses
20 values
Specified Prompt
stringclasses
20 values
Workflow
stringclasses
2 values
Hurdle Tag
stringclasses
2 values
Criteria type
stringclasses
6 values
Criterion Grounding Check
stringclasses
1 value
Description
stringlengths
28
201
1,395
147
Persona: I’m a 24 year old babysitter. Prompt: The kids I’m watching asked if we could write a letter with invisible ink. Help me figure out how to do this. We have paper, q-tips, lemons, and candles which I think we may need.
Persona: I’m a 24 year old babysitter. Prompt: The kids I’m watching asked if we could write a letter with invisible ink. Help me figure out how to do this. We have paper, q-tips, lemons, and candles which I think we may need.
Crafts
Not
Describes specific procedural steps
Not Grounded
Recommends that once dry, the paper can be slowly waved over the flame to reveal the message
1,396
147
Persona: I’m a 24 year old babysitter. Prompt: The kids I’m watching asked if we could write a letter with invisible ink. Help me figure out how to do this. We have paper, q-tips, lemons, and candles which I think we may need.
Persona: I’m a 24 year old babysitter. Prompt: The kids I’m watching asked if we could write a letter with invisible ink. Help me figure out how to do this. We have paper, q-tips, lemons, and candles which I think we may need.
Crafts
Not
Provides safety warnings
Not Grounded
States that children should not operate the candle nor apply heat to the paper
1,397
147
Persona: I’m a 24 year old babysitter. Prompt: The kids I’m watching asked if we could write a letter with invisible ink. Help me figure out how to do this. We have paper, q-tips, lemons, and candles which I think we may need.
Persona: I’m a 24 year old babysitter. Prompt: The kids I’m watching asked if we could write a letter with invisible ink. Help me figure out how to do this. We have paper, q-tips, lemons, and candles which I think we may need.
Crafts
Not
Provides general DIY guidance and tips
Not Grounded
States that non-flame heat sources can be used to heat the paper
1,736
147
Persona: I’m a 24 year old babysitter. Prompt: The kids I’m watching asked if we could write a letter with invisible ink. Help me figure out how to do this. We have paper, q-tips, lemons, and candles which I think we may need.
Persona: I’m a 24 year old babysitter. Prompt: The kids I’m watching asked if we could write a letter with invisible ink. Help me figure out how to do this. We have paper, q-tips, lemons, and candles which I think we may need.
Crafts
Hurdle
Provides step-by-step instructions
Not Grounded
Provides instructions for making invisible ink at home
1,599
157
Persona: I am a 35-year-old tenant in a furnished apartment. My landlord expects me to handle minor furniture repairs myself as long as I do not change how the furniture looks. Prompt: One of the wooden dining chairs in my apartment has become wobbly. The small horizontal bar between the front and back legs is loose on one side. The end of the bar still sits in its hole, wiggles a few millimeters, and can slide in and out slightly, but it does not pull all the way out. I have some materials: super glue, wood glue, duct tape, painter’s tape, sandpaper, toothpicks, rubbing alcohol, and paper towels. Inside the apartment’s old toolbox, I also found wood filler, several nails, zip ties, loose wood chips, assorted screws, and a few small metal brackets. I want the repair to be strong enough for an adult to sit safely. Explain step by step how to fix the loose bar using any of these items.
Persona: I am a 35-year-old tenant in a furnished apartment. My landlord expects me to handle minor furniture repairs myself as long as I do not change how the furniture looks. Prompt: One of the wooden dining chairs in my apartment has become wobbly. The small horizontal bar between the front and back legs is loose on one side. The end of the bar still sits in its hole, wiggles a few millimeters, and can slide in and out slightly, but it does not pull all the way out. I have some materials: super glue, wood glue, duct tape, painter’s tape, sandpaper, toothpicks, rubbing alcohol, and paper towels. Inside the apartment’s old toolbox, I also found wood filler, several nails, zip ties, loose wood chips, assorted screws, and a few small metal brackets. I want the repair to be strong enough for an adult to sit safely. Explain step by step how to fix the loose bar using any of these items.
Repairs
Not
Describes specific procedural steps
Not Grounded
Recommends cleaning the chair bar joint area by prying loose dust and old glue free with a toothpick
1,639
157
Persona: I am a 35-year-old tenant in a furnished apartment. My landlord expects me to handle minor furniture repairs myself as long as I do not change how the furniture looks. Prompt: One of the wooden dining chairs in my apartment has become wobbly. The small horizontal bar between the front and back legs is loose on one side. The end of the bar still sits in its hole, wiggles a few millimeters, and can slide in and out slightly, but it does not pull all the way out. I have some materials: super glue, wood glue, duct tape, painter’s tape, sandpaper, toothpicks, rubbing alcohol, and paper towels. Inside the apartment’s old toolbox, I also found wood filler, several nails, zip ties, loose wood chips, assorted screws, and a few small metal brackets. I want the repair to be strong enough for an adult to sit safely. Explain step by step how to fix the loose bar using any of these items.
Persona: I am a 35-year-old tenant in a furnished apartment. My landlord expects me to handle minor furniture repairs myself as long as I do not change how the furniture looks. Prompt: One of the wooden dining chairs in my apartment has become wobbly. The small horizontal bar between the front and back legs is loose on one side. The end of the bar still sits in its hole, wiggles a few millimeters, and can slide in and out slightly, but it does not pull all the way out. I have some materials: super glue, wood glue, duct tape, painter’s tape, sandpaper, toothpicks, rubbing alcohol, and paper towels. Inside the apartment’s old toolbox, I also found wood filler, several nails, zip ties, loose wood chips, assorted screws, and a few small metal brackets. I want the repair to be strong enough for an adult to sit safely. Explain step by step how to fix the loose bar using any of these items.
Repairs
Not
Describes specific procedural steps
Not Grounded
Recommends, after removing loose dust and glue, wiping the joint area with rubbing alcohol using a paper towel
1,640
157
Persona: I am a 35-year-old tenant in a furnished apartment. My landlord expects me to handle minor furniture repairs myself as long as I do not change how the furniture looks. Prompt: One of the wooden dining chairs in my apartment has become wobbly. The small horizontal bar between the front and back legs is loose on one side. The end of the bar still sits in its hole, wiggles a few millimeters, and can slide in and out slightly, but it does not pull all the way out. I have some materials: super glue, wood glue, duct tape, painter’s tape, sandpaper, toothpicks, rubbing alcohol, and paper towels. Inside the apartment’s old toolbox, I also found wood filler, several nails, zip ties, loose wood chips, assorted screws, and a few small metal brackets. I want the repair to be strong enough for an adult to sit safely. Explain step by step how to fix the loose bar using any of these items.
Persona: I am a 35-year-old tenant in a furnished apartment. My landlord expects me to handle minor furniture repairs myself as long as I do not change how the furniture looks. Prompt: One of the wooden dining chairs in my apartment has become wobbly. The small horizontal bar between the front and back legs is loose on one side. The end of the bar still sits in its hole, wiggles a few millimeters, and can slide in and out slightly, but it does not pull all the way out. I have some materials: super glue, wood glue, duct tape, painter’s tape, sandpaper, toothpicks, rubbing alcohol, and paper towels. Inside the apartment’s old toolbox, I also found wood filler, several nails, zip ties, loose wood chips, assorted screws, and a few small metal brackets. I want the repair to be strong enough for an adult to sit safely. Explain step by step how to fix the loose bar using any of these items.
Repairs
Not
Describes specific procedural steps
Not Grounded
Recommends, after fully cleaning the joint area, applying a thin film of wood glue to the exposed part of the wooden chair bar
1,641
157
Persona: I am a 35-year-old tenant in a furnished apartment. My landlord expects me to handle minor furniture repairs myself as long as I do not change how the furniture looks. Prompt: One of the wooden dining chairs in my apartment has become wobbly. The small horizontal bar between the front and back legs is loose on one side. The end of the bar still sits in its hole, wiggles a few millimeters, and can slide in and out slightly, but it does not pull all the way out. I have some materials: super glue, wood glue, duct tape, painter’s tape, sandpaper, toothpicks, rubbing alcohol, and paper towels. Inside the apartment’s old toolbox, I also found wood filler, several nails, zip ties, loose wood chips, assorted screws, and a few small metal brackets. I want the repair to be strong enough for an adult to sit safely. Explain step by step how to fix the loose bar using any of these items.
Persona: I am a 35-year-old tenant in a furnished apartment. My landlord expects me to handle minor furniture repairs myself as long as I do not change how the furniture looks. Prompt: One of the wooden dining chairs in my apartment has become wobbly. The small horizontal bar between the front and back legs is loose on one side. The end of the bar still sits in its hole, wiggles a few millimeters, and can slide in and out slightly, but it does not pull all the way out. I have some materials: super glue, wood glue, duct tape, painter’s tape, sandpaper, toothpicks, rubbing alcohol, and paper towels. Inside the apartment’s old toolbox, I also found wood filler, several nails, zip ties, loose wood chips, assorted screws, and a few small metal brackets. I want the repair to be strong enough for an adult to sit safely. Explain step by step how to fix the loose bar using any of these items.
Repairs
Not
Describes specific procedural steps
Not Grounded
Recommends, after applying wood glue, holding the bar firmly in place using painter’s tape while the glue cures
1,642
157
Persona: I am a 35-year-old tenant in a furnished apartment. My landlord expects me to handle minor furniture repairs myself as long as I do not change how the furniture looks. Prompt: One of the wooden dining chairs in my apartment has become wobbly. The small horizontal bar between the front and back legs is loose on one side. The end of the bar still sits in its hole, wiggles a few millimeters, and can slide in and out slightly, but it does not pull all the way out. I have some materials: super glue, wood glue, duct tape, painter’s tape, sandpaper, toothpicks, rubbing alcohol, and paper towels. Inside the apartment’s old toolbox, I also found wood filler, several nails, zip ties, loose wood chips, assorted screws, and a few small metal brackets. I want the repair to be strong enough for an adult to sit safely. Explain step by step how to fix the loose bar using any of these items.
Persona: I am a 35-year-old tenant in a furnished apartment. My landlord expects me to handle minor furniture repairs myself as long as I do not change how the furniture looks. Prompt: One of the wooden dining chairs in my apartment has become wobbly. The small horizontal bar between the front and back legs is loose on one side. The end of the bar still sits in its hole, wiggles a few millimeters, and can slide in and out slightly, but it does not pull all the way out. I have some materials: super glue, wood glue, duct tape, painter’s tape, sandpaper, toothpicks, rubbing alcohol, and paper towels. Inside the apartment’s old toolbox, I also found wood filler, several nails, zip ties, loose wood chips, assorted screws, and a few small metal brackets. I want the repair to be strong enough for an adult to sit safely. Explain step by step how to fix the loose bar using any of these items.
Repairs
Not
Describes specific procedural steps
Not Grounded
Recommends removing the painter's tape after the glue fully cures, finalizing the repair
1,739
157
Persona: I am a 35-year-old tenant in a furnished apartment. My landlord expects me to handle minor furniture repairs myself as long as I do not change how the furniture looks. Prompt: One of the wooden dining chairs in my apartment has become wobbly. The small horizontal bar between the front and back legs is loose on one side. The end of the bar still sits in its hole, wiggles a few millimeters, and can slide in and out slightly, but it does not pull all the way out. I have some materials: super glue, wood glue, duct tape, painter’s tape, sandpaper, toothpicks, rubbing alcohol, and paper towels. Inside the apartment’s old toolbox, I also found wood filler, several nails, zip ties, loose wood chips, assorted screws, and a few small metal brackets. I want the repair to be strong enough for an adult to sit safely. Explain step by step how to fix the loose bar using any of these items.
Persona: I am a 35-year-old tenant in a furnished apartment. My landlord expects me to handle minor furniture repairs myself as long as I do not change how the furniture looks. Prompt: One of the wooden dining chairs in my apartment has become wobbly. The small horizontal bar between the front and back legs is loose on one side. The end of the bar still sits in its hole, wiggles a few millimeters, and can slide in and out slightly, but it does not pull all the way out. I have some materials: super glue, wood glue, duct tape, painter’s tape, sandpaper, toothpicks, rubbing alcohol, and paper towels. Inside the apartment’s old toolbox, I also found wood filler, several nails, zip ties, loose wood chips, assorted screws, and a few small metal brackets. I want the repair to be strong enough for an adult to sit safely. Explain step by step how to fix the loose bar using any of these items.
Repairs
Hurdle
Provides step-by-step instructions
Not Grounded
Provides step-by-step instructions for fixing a wobbly wooden dining chair