{
  "assessmentTests": {
    "learning_style": {
      "name": "Learning Style Test",
      "desc": "12 questions mapping how you naturally prefer to take in and practise new information onto the four classic learning modalities — Visual, Auditory, Reading/Writing, and Kinesthetic. A self-reflection snapshot of your study preferences, not a clinical test or a rule about how you must learn.",
      "recommendation": "Answer for how you genuinely like to learn on an ordinary day, not how you think a 'good student' should. There's no 'best' style — each one has real strengths, and most people lean on a blend depending on the subject. Treat the result as a nudge toward methods that feel less like a slog, not a verdict on how you're allowed to learn.",
      "questions": [
        {
          "question": "When I'm learning something new, I understand it best once I can see it — a diagram, chart, or picture makes it click.",
          "options": [
            { "icon": "🙅", "label": "Not at all", "desc": "Pictures don't do much for me" },
            { "icon": "🤔", "label": "A little", "desc": "Sometimes a visual helps" },
            { "icon": "💫", "label": "Mostly", "desc": "Seeing it usually makes it click" },
            { "icon": "👁️", "label": "Exactly", "desc": "I have to see it to really get it" }
          ]
        },
        {
          "question": "I learn best by listening — a good spoken explanation sticks with me better than reading the same thing.",
          "options": [
            { "icon": "🙅", "label": "Not at all", "desc": "Listening alone rarely lands" },
            { "icon": "🤔", "label": "A little", "desc": "A good explainer helps now and then" },
            { "icon": "💫", "label": "Mostly", "desc": "Hearing it usually beats reading it" },
            { "icon": "👂", "label": "Exactly", "desc": "My ears are my fastest way in" }
          ]
        },
        {
          "question": "When I want to learn something, my instinct is to read about it and take written notes.",
          "options": [
            { "icon": "🙅", "label": "Not at all", "desc": "Reading is my last resort" },
            { "icon": "🤔", "label": "A little", "desc": "I'll read if I have to" },
            { "icon": "💫", "label": "Mostly", "desc": "Reading and notes are usually my first move" },
            { "icon": "📖", "label": "Exactly", "desc": "Give me the text and a pen and I'm set" }
          ]
        },
        {
          "question": "I learn best by doing — give me the thing to try hands-on and it finally makes sense.",
          "options": [
            { "icon": "🙅", "label": "Not at all", "desc": "I prefer to understand before I touch it" },
            { "icon": "🤔", "label": "A little", "desc": "Hands-on helps once I've got the basics" },
            { "icon": "💫", "label": "Mostly", "desc": "Doing it is usually how it clicks" },
            { "icon": "✋", "label": "Exactly", "desc": "I only really learn by getting my hands on it" }
          ]
        },
        {
          "question": "I remember things better when they're colour-coded, mapped out, or laid out visually rather than just told to me.",
          "options": [
            { "icon": "🙅", "label": "Not at all", "desc": "Layout makes little difference to me" },
            { "icon": "🤔", "label": "A little", "desc": "A tidy layout helps a bit" },
            { "icon": "💫", "label": "Mostly", "desc": "Visual structure usually helps me recall" },
            { "icon": "🗺️", "label": "Exactly", "desc": "Colour and layout are how I remember" }
          ]
        },
        {
          "question": "I often understand an idea only once I've talked it through out loud with someone.",
          "options": [
            { "icon": "🙅", "label": "Not at all", "desc": "I work things out quietly on my own" },
            { "icon": "🤔", "label": "A little", "desc": "Talking helps occasionally" },
            { "icon": "💫", "label": "Mostly", "desc": "Saying it out loud usually unlocks it" },
            { "icon": "🗣️", "label": "Exactly", "desc": "I think by talking — it's how I get it" }
          ]
        },
        {
          "question": "Writing things down — lists, summaries, rewriting in my own words — is how I really lock information in.",
          "options": [
            { "icon": "🙅", "label": "Not at all", "desc": "Rewriting doesn't do much for me" },
            { "icon": "🤔", "label": "A little", "desc": "I'll jot the odd note" },
            { "icon": "💫", "label": "Mostly", "desc": "Writing it usually makes it stick" },
            { "icon": "✍️", "label": "Exactly", "desc": "If I haven't written it, I won't retain it" }
          ]
        },
        {
          "question": "I get restless with pure theory; I'd rather jump in, make mistakes, and figure it out as I go.",
          "options": [
            { "icon": "🙅", "label": "Not at all", "desc": "I like the theory before I start" },
            { "icon": "🤔", "label": "A little", "desc": "I'll experiment once I'm comfortable" },
            { "icon": "💫", "label": "Mostly", "desc": "I usually prefer to dive in and adjust" },
            { "icon": "🛠️", "label": "Exactly", "desc": "Trial-and-error is my whole method" }
          ]
        },
        {
          "question": "When someone gives me directions, I picture a map in my head or wish they'd just draw it.",
          "options": [
            { "icon": "🙅", "label": "Not at all", "desc": "Spoken directions work fine for me" },
            { "icon": "🤔", "label": "A little", "desc": "I sometimes sketch a rough map" },
            { "icon": "💫", "label": "Mostly", "desc": "I usually turn directions into a mental map" },
            { "icon": "👁️", "label": "Exactly", "desc": "I need to see or draw the route to follow it" }
          ]
        },
        {
          "question": "I'd rather listen to a podcast or recorded explanation than read an article on the same topic.",
          "options": [
            { "icon": "🙅", "label": "Not at all", "desc": "I'd take the article every time" },
            { "icon": "🤔", "label": "A little", "desc": "Depends on the topic" },
            { "icon": "💫", "label": "Mostly", "desc": "I usually reach for audio first" },
            { "icon": "🎧", "label": "Exactly", "desc": "Audio over text, always" }
          ]
        },
        {
          "question": "I'd rather read the instructions or manual than watch a demo or be shown.",
          "options": [
            { "icon": "🙅", "label": "Not at all", "desc": "Just show me — I skip the manual" },
            { "icon": "🤔", "label": "A little", "desc": "I'll skim the instructions" },
            { "icon": "💫", "label": "Mostly", "desc": "I usually read the manual first" },
            { "icon": "📚", "label": "Exactly", "desc": "Give me the written instructions over any demo" }
          ]
        },
        {
          "question": "When I'm learning a new skill, I skip ahead to practising it rather than studying it first.",
          "options": [
            { "icon": "🙅", "label": "Not at all", "desc": "I study thoroughly before I try" },
            { "icon": "🤔", "label": "A little", "desc": "I do a bit of prep, then practise" },
            { "icon": "💫", "label": "Mostly", "desc": "I usually jump to practising fast" },
            { "icon": "🏃", "label": "Exactly", "desc": "I learn by practising — studying comes later, if ever" }
          ]
        }
      ],
      "results": {
        "visual": {
          "name": "The Visual Learner",
          "desc": "Your answers point to a Visual style — you understand and remember best when you can see it. Diagrams, charts, maps, colour-coding, and mental pictures are how new ideas click for you, and a wall of plain text or a purely spoken explanation can leave you reaching for a pen to sketch it out. Your real strength is spotting structure and patterns: because you can picture how the pieces fit, you often grasp the shape of something faster than people who only hear or read it. This is a self-reflection snapshot of how you prefer to take in information, not a rule about how you must learn — most people use a blend, and yours simply leans toward the eye.",
          "recommendation": "Lean into what works: turn dense notes into diagrams, mind-maps, and colour-coded summaries, and look for videos, infographics, and charts before plain text. Highlighters and a whiteboard are genuinely your friends. The growth edge is that not everything comes pre-visualised — practise converting text and talk into your own quick sketch so you're not stuck when there's no diagram. And watch the trap of a pretty slide feeling like understanding: close it and try to redraw the picture from memory to be sure it really landed."
        },
        "auditory": {
          "name": "The Auditory Learner",
          "desc": "Your answers point to an Auditory style — you learn most through your ears. A good spoken explanation sticks better than the same thing in print, you often understand an idea only once you've talked it through, and you'd reach for a podcast or lecture over an article any day. Your real strength is that discussion, teaching, and listening aren't background noise for you — they're your fastest route in, and explaining something out loud is often how you discover you actually know it. This is a self-reflection snapshot of how you prefer to take in information, not a verdict on your ability — most people use a blend, and yours simply leans toward the ear.",
          "recommendation": "Play to it: read tricky material aloud, record summaries and replay them, and seek out lectures, podcasts, and study partners to talk things through with. Explaining a topic to someone else is one of your most powerful tools. The growth edge is silent, text-heavy material — give it a voice by reading it out or recording it so it doesn't slide off. And watch the trap of a great conversation feeling like mastery: test yourself later, away from the voice that made it easy, to be sure it stuck."
        },
        "reading_writing": {
          "name": "The Reading/Writing Learner",
          "desc": "Your answers point to a Reading/Writing style — words are your home turf. You'd rather read about something and take written notes than watch a demo, and rewriting things in your own words (lists, summaries, flashcards) is how you really lock them in. Your real strength is that you can absorb dense text others bounce off and turn it into clear, ordered notes — you learn by reading, organising, and writing, which makes you self-sufficient with almost any written material. This is a self-reflection snapshot of how you prefer to take in information, not a measure of your intelligence — most people use a blend, and yours simply leans toward the written word.",
          "recommendation": "Use your engine: take notes, rewrite them in your own language, make lists and summaries, and turn what you learn into written flashcards or outlines. Reading the manual really is your fastest path. The growth edge is that some skills don't live in text — for hands-on things, resist over-reading and just start doing. And watch the trap of endless note-taking standing in for recall: close the page and try to write the key points from memory to prove it's actually in there."
        },
        "kinesthetic": {
          "name": "The Kinesthetic Learner",
          "desc": "Your answers point to a Kinesthetic style — you learn by doing. Pure theory makes you restless; give you the thing to try hands-on and it finally makes sense, and you'd rather jump in, make mistakes, and figure it out as you go than study first. Your real strength is that you turn knowledge into skill fast, because attempt-and-adjust beats read-and-wait for you — you build real competence through practice while others are still preparing. This is a self-reflection snapshot of how you prefer to take in information, not a limit on what you can master — most people use a blend, and yours simply leans toward the hands.",
          "recommendation": "Build it in: look for hands-on practice, real examples, simulations, and 'learn by building' projects, and break study into short active bursts rather than long passive reading. Teaching your hands is teaching your brain. The growth edge is that some foundations genuinely have to be learned before doing — build a little patience for the boring setup phase, and don't skip the instructions entirely, since a two-minute read can save you a long, messy detour. Pair your doing with a quick written or visual recap so the lesson sticks beyond the moment."
        }
      },
      "retakePrompt": {
        "lastResult": "Last time, your learning style came out as {{archetype}}.",
        "evolvedHint": "Your preferred way of learning isn't fixed — it shifts with the subject, the situation, and the tools you have. You might be visual for one thing and kinesthetic for another. If a different style surfaces on a retake, it usually just reflects what you had in mind this time.",
        "retakeButton": "Take the test again"
      }
    }
  },
  "testNames": { "learning-style": "Learning Style Test" }
}
