Re-framing
How we see and respond to the world around us very often depends on how we frame things. What we choose to see or not see, include or cut. We do this all the time […]
How we see and respond to the world around us very often depends on how we frame things. What we choose to see or not see, include or cut. We do this all the time […]
The learning landscape continues to evolve in very interesting ways. I’ve noticed lately, for example, that artificial intelligence (AI) seems to finally be getting significant traction. Enough so that numerous notable figures like Stephen Hawking,
The Future and Learning – Connecting the Dots Continue Reading »
“Learning begins by emptying your cup, so that you can fill it with what you find.” Leo Babauta, Zen Habits from My Pursuit of the Art of Living Leo has inspired me on many occasions.
What learning is … (#1) Continue Reading »
What’s the future hold? No matter what the answer to that question, active lifelong learners will be the ones best prepared to handle it. That’s just one of the perspectives that emerges in a recent
Are you ready to enter the Shift Age? Continue Reading »
Is our desire to be engaged, effective lifelong learners beaten down, if not killed outright by the time we leave high school? That may be too bleak a conclusion to draw, but the findings of
A Bad Start to Lifelong Learning? Continue Reading »
For years my wife and I have dutifully put money into our kids’s 529 college savings accounts. Our assumptions, of course, are that (a) a college education is valuable, (b) everyone needs one, and (c) it
I was out on my daily learning walk this morning and the podcast of choice was – as it often is on Monday mornings – Mitch Joel’s Six Pixels of Separation. While most people would
The Start-Up of You – A Conversation Worth Catching Continue Reading »
I wrote a while back about the concept of deliberate practice, which is basically the idea that if you want to achieve mastery of something you need to (a) practice a lot, and (b) practice
Why Practice, Practice, Practice May Not Get You To Carnegie Hall Continue Reading »