It’s simple math 🧐 I use to think that motivation was the key to monumental success. Long story short, it’s not. It’s about the little things you do every day that will take you from reasonable to slightly unreasonable to completely unreasonable progress. Your future is not defined by how motivated you are, but by your daily routines and systems. I believe in this so much that we named our company Butterfly 3ffect to reflect the value of incremental gains. we believe that that’s how the best people and brands grow. Here’s how you grow the small way: 1. Start by setting achievable goals, like reading one chapter of a book each day or going for a short walk 2. Practice gratitude by writing down three things you're thankful for every night before bed 3. Engage in daily self-reflection, even if it's just for a few minutes, to assess your thoughts and actions 4. Incorporate small acts of kindness into your daily routine, like holding the door for someone or offering a genuine compliment 5. Learn something new every day, whether it's a fun fact, a new word, or a new skill 6. Prioritise self-care by getting enough sleep, staying hydrated, and taking breaks when needed 7. Surround yourself with positive influences, whether it's uplifting books, supportive friends, or inspiring podcasts 8. Embrace failure as a learning opportunity and a stepping stone to growth 9. Stay consistent and patient, knowing that small progress over time adds up to significant improvement 10. Celebrate your achievements, no matter how small, to stay motivated and encouraged along the way.
Continuous Learning Practices
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People are suffering—yet many still deny that hours with ChatGPT reshape how we focus, create and critique. A new MIT study, “Your Brain on ChatGPT: Accumulation of Cognitive Debt when Using an AI Assistant for Essay-Writing,” offers clear neurological evidence that the denial is misplaced. Read the study (lengthy but far more enjoyable than a conventional manuscript, with a dedicated TL;DR and a summarizing table for the LLM): https://lnkd.in/g6PBVwVe 🧠 What the researchers did - Fifty-four students wrote SAT-style essays across four sessions while high-density EEG tracked information flow among 32 brain regions. - Three tools were compared: no aid (“Brain-only”), Google search, and GPT-4o. - In Session 4 the groups were flipped: students who had written unaided now rewrote with GPT (Brain→LLM), while habitual GPT users had to write solo (LLM→Brain). ⚡ Key findings - Creativity offloaded, networks dimmed. Pure GPT use produced the weakest fronto-parietal and temporal connectivity of all conditions, signalling lighter executive control and shallower semantic processing. - Order matters. When students first wrestled with ideas on their own and then revised with GPT, brain-wide connectivity surged and exceeded every earlier GPT session. Conversely, writers who began with GPT and later worked without it showed the lowest coordination and leaned on GPT-favoured vocabulary, making their essays linguistically bland despite high grades. - Memory and ownership collapse. In their very first GPT session, none of the AI-assisted writers could quote a sentence they had just penned, whereas almost every solo writer could; the deficit persisted even after practice. - Cognitive debt accumulates. Repeated GPT use narrowed topic exploration and diversity; when AI crutches were removed, writers struggled to recover the breadth and depth of earlier human-only work. 🌱 So what? The study frames this tradeoff as cognitive debt: convenience today taxes our ability to learn, remember, and think later. Critically, the order of tool use matters. Starting with one’s ideas and then layering AI support can keep neural circuits firing on all cylinders, while starting with AI may stunt the networks that make creativity and critical reasoning uniquely human. 🤔 Where does that leave creativity? If AI drafts faster than we can think, our value shifts from typing first passes to deciding which ideas matter, why they matter, and when to switch the autopilot off. Hybrid routines—alternate tools-free phases with AI phases—may give us the best of both worlds: speed without surrendering cognitive agency. Further reading: Lively discussion (debate) between neuroethicist Nita Farahany and CEO of The Atlantic, Nicholas Thompson, “The Most Interesting Thing in AI” podcast. The big (and maybe the final) question for us is: What is humanity when AI takes over all the creative processes? Podcast link: https://lnkd.in/emeQkcK6
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Formative assessment is like a compass—it is ongoing, diagnostic, and designed to guide learning. It provides students with timely, actionable feedback during the learning process so they can improve before reaching the final destination. Examples include quizzes, think-pair-share, drafts, reflections, or teacher-student conferences. Formative assessments help identify misconceptions, adjust teaching strategies, and personalise support. In this way, they build student confidence and competence incrementally. Summative assessment is more like a snapshot—it evaluates what students have achieved at the end of an instructional period. It measures mastery against learning outcomes and is used to judge the effectiveness of instruction. Examples include final exams, projects, performances, or standardised tests. While summative assessments do not provide direct guidance during the learning process, they reflect the culmination of all the formative learning and feedback that came before.
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💡 What if every lesson felt like an adventure, not a chore? Let’s be honest: unforgettable learning doesn’t happen with boring lectures or endless notes. It happens when students feel excited, curious, and emotionally connected. 🔥 Here’s how to make learning stick—and spark real transformation in the classroom: 1️⃣ Light the curiosity fire first 🔥 Don’t dump facts. Start with a question so intriguing they can’t look away. When curiosity leads, engagement follows. 2️⃣ Make it a full-sensory experience 🎧👀🖐️ Learning isn’t just mental—it’s physical. Get them seeing, touching, hearing, and doing. The more senses involved, the deeper the retention. 3️⃣ Show, don’t tell 🧪 Skip the theory dump. Demonstrate it. Let them experiment, explore, mess up—and learn through doing. Discovery beats instruction. 4️⃣ Tap into emotion 💥 Stories. Surprise. Laughter. Relevance. When students feel something, they remember it. Emotion = memory glue. 5️⃣ Be the guide, not the guru 🧭 You’re not there to give all the answers. You’re there to open doors, ask great questions, and empower them to find the answers themselves. 🎯 Truth bomb: The best classrooms aren’t quiet—they’re buzzing with energy, ideas, and wide eyes. Learning isn’t about memorizing—it’s about experiencing. Let’s stop teaching for the test and start teaching for life. Who’s ready to make education magical again? #UnforgettableLearning #ModernTeaching #STEMEducation #LearningThatSticks #CreativeTeaching #StudentEngagement #EdTech #ExperientialLearning #FutureOfEducation #TeachingReimagined #India #Kawal #EducationReform #PassionForTeaching #21stCenturySkills #TeachingTips
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Most careers stall for 1 reason: People stop learning. They wait for the company to invest in them. Or for their manager to set up training. High performers, on the other hand, don't wait. They treat learning as part of the job - Even when the workday ends. Not endless study, Just small, repeatable habits - that compound. Here are 11 that make lifelong learning automatic: 1. Keep a "Questions" Note on Your Phone ↳Anytime you wonder about something, jot it down. Research one nightly 2. Replace the Doomscroll ↳Replace 30 minutes of dead scroll time with a course or podcast 3. Teach What You Learn ↳Write a short post, Loom, or explain it to a peer 4. Reverse Engineer Great Work ↳Take an article, pitch, or deck you admire and break down why it works 5. Shadow Someone 2 Steps Ahead ↳Don't ask for mentorship - just observe 6. Then, DO Ask for Mentorship ↳Say: "I admire how well you do X - would you mind coaching me on that?" 7. Run Tiny Experiments ↳Pick one skill and test it live this week 8. Force Repetitions by Tracking ↳For writing, word count. For sales, calls made. Progress is fuel 9. Do "Learning Sprints" ↳One focused topic for 30 days, then switch 10. Revisit Old Material ↳The second read often hits deeper than the first 11. End Your Day with Reflection ↳One line: "What did I learn today?" The compounding effect is real. Small reps + every day = Mastery. Agree? --- ♻️ Share this to inspire other life-long learners. And follow me George Stern for more personal growth content.
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I’ve had quite a few HR/People professionals reach out for career advice over the past year, and there’s one tip in particular that comes to mind every time. So for anyone thinking about how to grow their HR/People career more intentionally, here it is: Don’t pigeonhole yourself into one area of expertise. I’m not saying you can’t specialize. If L&D is your thing, go for it. But make sure you’re picking up and fine tuning other skills along the way. What do I mean? If you’re a recruiter, don’t just recruit. Dip your toes into the world of L&D by creating and leading interview trainings. Step into the world of analytics by running data reports on time to close, pipeline demographics, source of hire — go wild! If Learning & Development is more your jam, don’t just train. Build on your coaching skills by setting up office hours for any training attendees who need more 1:1 support. Spread your wings into the world of HRBP-ing by meeting with team leads to explore growth opportunities, develop metrics to track progress over time (i.e. are the trainings working?), etc. If you live in the world of Payroll & Benefits, take a trip over to Employee Engagement Avenue. What surveys could you run to assess whether or not your benefits are equitable, competitive, and easy to leverage. Are employees even aware of the full slate of benefits on offer? Here's why: 1. Increased stability. If you can only do one thing and your company decides that one thing is no longer in the budget or in line with company strategy, you run a far higher risk of losing your job. 2. More growth opportunities. Sure, recruiting might be your passion today, but what happens if you get bored 5 years down the line? What if there’s another field within the People space that you could love even more? What if a more senior position on your team opens up, but it requires a more diverse set of skills and experience? Exploring multiple areas within the HR space will broaden your opportunities tenfold. 3. Ability to combine and leverage different skill sets and perspectives. I am constantly impressed by the benefit that comes from a fresh perspective. Applying your Employee Engagement eyes to a recruiter problem could provide a creative solution to improving candidate experience. Putting on your DEI hat to tackle an L&D problem could identify a gap in accessibility for different learning styles and abilities. The possibilities are endless. What are your top tips for growing professionals in the HR/People space? #hr #peopleandculture #careerdevelopment
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Many people believe live trainings work better simply because people can talk to each other face‑to‑face, but that’s not the real reason. In reality, their effectiveness comes from something else entirely, they naturally follow a powerful learning rhythm. Great offline trainings follow one simple logic: action → reflection → understanding → application. This is Kolb’s Cycle. And it’s incredibly powerful. The problem? It was almost impossible to implement it in online learning. That’s why 90% of online courses look like “interactive lectures”: nice slides, videos, quizzes. But that’s content consumption, not transformation. And now - the unexpected twist. For the first time, online learning has caught up with offline experiences. Because AI removed the main barrier: it finally allows learners to get experience, reflection, and practice in a personalized way. Here’s how Kolb’s Cycle looks in modern learning design: 1️⃣ Concrete Experience — action Essence: the learner must do something, live through a situation, face a task — ideally experiencing difficulty or making a mistake that shows their current model doesn’t work. How online: role-based dialogue, scenario simulation. 2️⃣ Reflective Observation — reflection Essence: pause and think — what happened, what actions were taken, and why the result turned out this way. How online: interactive reflection prompts; AI coach provides feedback based on performance and the learner’s own reflections. 3️⃣ Abstract Conceptualisation — understanding Essence: form a new behavioural model — concepts, principles, algorithms that explain how to act more effectively. How online: short video lecture, model breakdown, interactive frameworks, checklists, interactive infographics. 4️⃣ Active Experimentation — application Essence: try the new model in a safe environment and observe the result. How online: AI-based simulation, situational exercise, case-solving with the new approach; AI coach supports and adjusts. The outcome? Online learning stops being “content” and becomes a behaviour tracker. A course becomes a training simulator, not a film. Kolb’s Cycle finally becomes real in digital learning. Do you use this framework? What results have you seen?
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I used to confuse age with mastery. That time itself would make me wiser. That one day, readiness would simply arrive. That a certain age would unlock the courage to begin. But time alone didn’t make me better, wiser, or ready. Deliberate action did. The trials. The errors. The false starts and the lessons learned. They all shaped what I’ve achieved so far. Maybe you’re in that place right now… Holding back, waiting for the “right time.” I’ve been there too. And here’s what I’ve learned: Readiness shows up once you’ve already begun. Here are five principles that can help you push past the readiness trap and keep you moving forward: 1. Embrace the beginner’s mindset. Even as you gain experience, stay humble and curious. → Ask more questions than you answer. → Challenge assumptions - especially your own. → Stay open, stay flexible. 2. Make learning a daily habit. Your growth is your responsibility - own it. → Block out focused time for learning. → Set clear and specific goals. → Share what you learn with others. 3. Step outside your comfort zone. Growth comes with discomfort. → Take on projects that scare you a little. → Learn complementary skills outside your core role. → Start before you feel ready. 4. Let go of outdated thinking. Don’t cling to old methods just because they once worked. → Question “best practices” that no longer fit. → Adapt quickly when new information emerges. → Explore new technologies with curiosity. 5. Turn knowledge into impact. Experience > knowledge. → Apply what you learn by creating. → Test ideas through small experiments. → Teach others - it deepens your own mastery. Stop doubting yourself. Real growth happens when you step into things you’re not yet ‘ready’ for. Remember: Success isn’t final. Failure isn’t fatal. And every master was once a disaster. 👉 Which principle resonates most with your journey right now? 🔁 Reshare this to give someone else the nudge they’ve been waiting for. ➕ Follow Cristina Grancea for more purpose-driven leadership insights.
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We are excited to announce the release of our "Guide to Integrating Generative AI for Deeper Literacy Learning" - a collaboration between AI for Education and Student Achievement Partners. We co-developed the guide with SAP, experts in high quality instruction, with an understanding that both the technology and its educational applications are at it's earliest stages. We also know that many teachers, leaders, and students are concerned about the impact the tools will have on learning. We want this guide to act as a jumping off point for educators that are trying to determine if GenAI can positively intersect with high quality instruction in the literacy classroom. The Key Principles of the Guide: • GenAI tools should support, not circumvent, productive struggle for students • AI literacy should come before the Integration of GenAI tools • GenAI should augment educators’ pedagogical expertise, content knowledge, and knowledge of students • Integration when appropriate should enhance, not replace, proven instructional practices • Usage should align with students’ developmental readiness and literacy goals Highlights: • A framework for distinguishing productive vs. counterproductive struggle in literacy classrooms • Practical strategies for using AI to enhance student engagement without replacing critical thinking for students • Best practices for enhancing cognitive lift and what strategies to avoid that offload cognitive lift • Detailed GenAI use cases across foundational skills, knowledge building, and writing instruction • Elementary-specific guidance emphasizing teacher-led AI implementation and modeling • Comprehensive worked examples with Chatbot transcripts that illustrate these practices This is just the beginning, which is why we're actively gathering educator feedback to refine and expand these resources through a survey in the guide. Thank you so much to Carey Swanson and Jasmine Costello, PMP from SAP for being such wonderful partners in this work! You can access the full guide or watch the accompanying webinar in the link in the comments! #ailiteracy #literacy #GenAI #K12
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What is CI/CD automation? CI/CD automation is a process of automating the following stages of the software delivery pipeline: Continuous integration (CI): This involves automating the process of building and testing your code every time a change is made. Continuous delivery or deployment (CD): This involves automating the process of deploying your code to production. 𝗔𝗿𝗰𝗵𝗶𝘁𝗲𝗰𝘁-𝗗𝗿𝗶𝘃𝗲𝗻 𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗼𝗺𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻: The Blueprint of Excellence The true power of CI/CD is unleashed through architect-driven automation. This approach leverages the expertise of architects to design CI/CD pipelines that are not only efficient but also resilient and secure. By planning the automation strategy, architects ensure that the pipeline is aligned with the project's goals, technology stack, and operational requirements. This strategic oversight is critical in optimizing the CI/CD process, minimizing bottlenecks, and ensuring that the automation tools and practices adopted are the best fit for the project. 𝗪𝗵𝘆 𝗖𝗜/𝗖𝗗 𝗠𝗮𝘁𝘁𝗲𝗿𝘀: Beyond Speed and Efficiency While CI/CD is often celebrated for its ability to speed up software delivery, its benefits extend far beyond just efficiency: - 𝗘𝗻𝗵𝗮𝗻𝗰𝗲𝗱 𝗤𝘂𝗮𝗹𝗶𝘁𝘆: Automated testing ensures that bugs are caught early, improving the overall quality of the software. - 𝗙𝗮𝘀𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗙𝗲𝗲𝗱𝗯𝗮𝗰𝗸 𝗟𝗼𝗼𝗽: Continuous integration provides immediate feedback on code quality, allowing developers to make quick adjustments. - 𝗥𝗲𝗱𝘂𝗰𝗲𝗱 𝗥𝗶𝘀𝗸: Smaller, more frequent deployments reduce the risk associated with releasing new features or changes. - 𝗜𝗻𝗰𝗿𝗲𝗮𝘀𝗲𝗱 𝗣𝗿𝗼𝗱𝘂𝗰𝘁𝗶𝘃𝗶𝘁𝘆: Automation frees developers from manual tasks, allowing them to focus on creating value. The journey to implementing CI/CD may seem daunting, but the rewards are unparalleled. By embracing architect-driven automation, organizations can not only accelerate their software delivery but also enhance their ability to respond to market changes and customer needs swiftly. As we navigate the complexities of modern software development, let's champion the adoption of CI/CD practices. It's time to shift our mindset, innovate relentlessly, and drive towards a future where software development is more agile, resilient, and aligned with the ever-changing digital landscape.
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