How to Control AI Conversations Based on Your Speaking Level
How to Control AI Conversations
Based on Your Speaking Level
A real, practical guide for English learners — from A2 beginners to B2 confident speakers. With copy-paste prompts. Yes, actually.
Wait — Can You Really Control How AI Talks to You?
Yes. 100%. And most people have absolutely no idea they can do this.
If you’ve ever used ChatGPT or Claude and thought “this is too hard to understand” or “this is too basic, I want more” — that’s not the AI’s fault. That’s just nobody told you how to set the rules.
Here’s the truth: AI doesn’t automatically know if you’re a beginner or an advanced speaker. It just guesses based on how you write to it. And sometimes? It guesses completely wrong. So you end up with answers that are either way too complicated or way too simple.
This guide will show you exactly what to say to take control — at your level, in your way. With real prompts you can copy and paste right now.
This guide uses CEFR language levels — A2 (basic), B1 (intermediate), B2 (upper-intermediate). These are international standards used worldwide. Find your level? Let’s begin.
Why This Matters More Than You Think
Imagine asking for help with an email and the AI responds like a university professor. You don’t understand half the words. You feel stupid. You close the tab.
Now imagine asking the same thing and the AI talks to you like a friendly teacher — slow, clear, simple. You understand everything. You feel confident. You actually learn.
Same AI. Same question. Completely different experience. The difference? How you started the conversation.
Think of AI like a super smart person who can switch how they talk. They can be a professor, a teacher, a friend — but only if you ask them to. Otherwise, they just guess. And guessing isn’t good enough for learning.
When you tell the AI your level upfront, here’s what changes:
- It uses simpler or richer vocabulary depending on your needs
- It explains grammar in ways you can actually follow
- It gives you examples that match your life, not textbook examples
- It corrects your mistakes gently (or directly — your call)
- It helps you move to the next level instead of staying stuck
Okay. Let’s get into the levels. Find yours and grab those prompts.
🟡 Level A2 — You Know the Basics, But Big Words Scare You
At A2, you know how to say hello, talk about your day, and maybe order food. You understand simple sentences. Long paragraphs with big words? They make your brain go fuzzy. And that’s completely okay.
The good news: AI can slow down completely for you. You just have to ask it to.
What to Tell the AI
Your job at A2 is to be very clear about what you need. Tell the AI your level, tell it to use simple words, and tell it to go slowly. Be specific. Here’s how:
📋 Copy-Paste Prompts for A2 Learners
These are ready to use. Copy one, paste it into any AI chat, and start. Change the words in [brackets] to your topic.
If the AI’s answer is still too hard, just say: “This is too difficult. Please use simpler words.” — That’s it. The AI will try again. You don’t need a complicated request. Keep it simple, because that’s what this level is all about.
🟢 Level B1 — You Can Talk, But You Want to Sound Better
At B1, you’re no longer scared of English. You can hold a conversation. You can write an email. But sometimes you sound a little… stiff? Robotic? You know what you want to say but you’re not sure how to say it naturally.
B1 is actually a really exciting place to be. You have the foundation. Now you build the house.
What B1 Learners Actually Need
At this level, you need the AI to push you a little. Not too much — but a little. You want natural language. You want to sound like a real speaker, not a textbook. Tell the AI that.
📋 Copy-Paste Prompts for B1 Learners
Want to push yourself? After any AI answer, type: “Can you say that in a more casual way, like a friend would say it?” — You’ll start seeing the difference between formal English and natural English. That gap is exactly what B1 learners need to close.
🔴 Level B2 — You’re Confident, But You Want That Native Edge
At B2, people think you’re great at English. And you are! You can explain things, debate topics, write proper paragraphs. But something still feels… off? Maybe you still sound a tiny bit foreign. Maybe your writing is correct but not captivating. Maybe you want to understand humour, sarcasm, cultural references.
B2 is where things get really interesting. This is where you stop learning grammar and start learning feel.
What B2 Learners Are Really After
You don’t need the AI to slow down anymore. You need it to treat you like a near-native speaker — and challenge you. Tell it to give you the full picture: nuance, tone, connotation, register. Ask for the things textbooks never taught you.
📋 Copy-Paste Prompts for B2 Learners
At B2, your biggest enemy is playing it safe. Your English is correct — but is it interesting? Ask the AI: “Does this sound like someone who really knows English, or does it sound like a careful learner? What would a native speaker say instead?” — Brace yourself. The feedback might surprise you. That’s the point.
Quick Reference — What to Ask at Each Level
Save this. Screenshot it. Come back to it whenever you start a new AI session.
| If you want to… | 🟡 A2 | 🟢 B1 | 🔴 B2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Set the tone | “Use simple words only” | “Use natural English, not too simple” | “Treat me as a near-native speaker” |
| Check writing | “Explain mistakes simply” | “Show mistakes + a more natural version” | “Review like an editor — focus on nuance” |
| Learn vocabulary | “5 easy words with simple meanings” | “Phrasal verbs with a short dialogue” | “Explain connotation and register” |
| Practice speaking | “Ask me slow, easy questions” | “Have a real conversation, correct me” | “Challenge my arguments, improve phrasing” |
| If it’s too hard | “Use simpler words please” | “Can you say that more casually?” | “Give me a more precise version” |
Mistakes People Make With AI (Don’t Be This Person)
Saying “Help me with English” tells the AI nothing. Help with what? Grammar? Writing? Speaking? Always give a specific topic.
The AI doesn’t read your mind. Without your level, it guesses — and usually guesses wrong. Always mention A2, B1, or B2 at the start.
You can reply! Say “That was too complicated” or “Can you give more examples?” The AI won’t get upset. Ask again, ask differently.
One focused question = one great answer. Ten questions at once = a messy answer. Keep it focused, one thing at a time.
Rules without examples are useless. Always add “Give me 3 examples” to any grammar or vocabulary question. Every single time.
The more information you give the AI about yourself, your level, and what you want — the better it helps you. Think of it like giving directions. “Take me somewhere nice” is terrible directions. “Take me to a quiet coffee shop, not too far, open now” is perfect directions. Be specific. The AI loves specific.
Bonus — 3 Power Phrases That Work at Any Level
These little add-ons work with almost any prompt. They make a huge difference. Add them at the end of whatever you’re asking.
Mix these with any of the level-specific prompts above. They work like seasoning — they make everything taste better.
The Takeaway — Read This Before You Close the Tab
AI is one of the most powerful English learning tools ever built. But it only works well when you are in control. And now? You are.
You know how to tell it your level. You know what to ask for. You have real prompts you can use today — not someday, today. The only thing left is to open any AI chat and start.
Don’t worry about getting it perfect. Just try. If the answer isn’t right, ask again. That back-and-forth? That IS the learning. That’s the whole point.
Open any AI chat. Copy the setup prompt for your level. Paste it. Add your topic. Press send. See what happens. You’ve already read the guide — now all you have to do is begin.
English is not something you find. It’s something you build — one conversation at a time. And you just got a very good set of tools.
Go use them. 🚀
