This document provides an introduction to lernOS, a framework for lifelong learning. It describes lernOS as consisting of 13-week sprints for setting objectives and measuring progress. The lernOS "wheel" has three components: mindset, skillset, and toolset. Learning paths offer exercises called "katas" to guide learning in areas like self-knowledge, goal-setting, and productivity. Peer support is available through online communities. The document aims to help readers develop skills for navigating today's uncertain world.
The document introduces lernOS, an approach for lifelong learning. It describes lernOS as operating like "brainware" rather than software. The lernOS approach involves three dimensions - mindset, skillset, and toolset. Learning sprints follow a 13-week cycle of planning, working towards objectives, weekly check-ins, and retrospectives. The document provides an overview of learning paths for beginners, focused on WOL, OKR, and GTD methods.
This document is a guide for sketchnoting based on the lernOS (learning operating system) approach. It introduces sketchnoting and provides basics on what sketchnotes are, how to create them, and different sketchnoting workflows. The guide then outlines a 12 week learning path to develop sketchnoting skills, including goals for each week and example sketchnote "katas" or exercises. It concludes by listing additional sketchnoting resources.
This document provides 162 tips across 5 categories for using e-learning tools:
1. 73 tips for using courseware authoring and e-learning development tools, organized into subsections on design, development, learner focus, tool selection, educator tips, classroom to online transitions, team issues, and specific software recommendations.
2. 39 tips for using rapid e-learning tools, organized into subsections on strategy, tool recommendations, selection, specific tools, and time/cost savings.
3. 9 tips for using media tools.
4. 20 tips for using simulation tools.
5. 21 tips for combining and deploying authoring tools, organized into overall strategies and specific combinations.
This document discusses managing groups and teams. It provides information on team cohesion, communication, conflict, motivation, inclusion, diversity, and personalities. Specifically, it addresses:
1) The importance of team cohesion and the factors needed to create and maintain cohesion such as team composition, internal environment, and management's role.
2) Potential issues with communication in teams like miscommunication and breakdowns, and tools for planning effective communication.
3) Different types of conflicts teams may face and methods for preventing and resolving conflicts, such as addressing underlying issues.
4) The role of motivation in team dynamics and ways to motivate team members.
5) How to select team members and lead
This document provides an overview of a book about Microsoft Office 2010. It includes the table of contents, copyright information, and discusses features for envisioning possibilities, expressing yourself effectively, and collaborating in Office and around the world. The summary explores new capabilities in Office 2010 for visual communication, teamwork, and working from anywhere using a variety of devices.
This chapter discusses programming techniques that apply to all programs, including those without input. The basic principle of keeping programs simple is introduced, along with corollaries of not speculating on future additions and writing your own subroutines. Subsequent chapters will build on these ideas to describe a specific type of program that can be expanded from simple to complex to handle a variety of problems through a problem-oriented language.
This document provides information about Macromedia Flash trademarks and copyright. It lists many Macromedia product names and technologies that are trademarks. It also acknowledges third party technologies used in Macromedia products and the copyright year of the document.
This document provides an overview of the Microsoft Project 2013 Step by Step guidebook. It teaches project management concepts and skills using a step-by-step approach. The guidebook allows the user to learn at their own pace through hands-on practice files and lessons. It covers topics such as creating and scheduling project plans, assigning resources, tracking progress, and communicating status through custom reports.
The document introduces lernOS, an approach for lifelong learning. It describes lernOS as operating like "brainware" rather than software. The lernOS approach involves three dimensions - mindset, skillset, and toolset. Learning sprints follow a 13-week cycle of planning, working towards objectives, weekly check-ins, and retrospectives. The document provides an overview of learning paths for beginners, focused on WOL, OKR, and GTD methods.
This document is a guide for sketchnoting based on the lernOS (learning operating system) approach. It introduces sketchnoting and provides basics on what sketchnotes are, how to create them, and different sketchnoting workflows. The guide then outlines a 12 week learning path to develop sketchnoting skills, including goals for each week and example sketchnote "katas" or exercises. It concludes by listing additional sketchnoting resources.
This document provides 162 tips across 5 categories for using e-learning tools:
1. 73 tips for using courseware authoring and e-learning development tools, organized into subsections on design, development, learner focus, tool selection, educator tips, classroom to online transitions, team issues, and specific software recommendations.
2. 39 tips for using rapid e-learning tools, organized into subsections on strategy, tool recommendations, selection, specific tools, and time/cost savings.
3. 9 tips for using media tools.
4. 20 tips for using simulation tools.
5. 21 tips for combining and deploying authoring tools, organized into overall strategies and specific combinations.
This document discusses managing groups and teams. It provides information on team cohesion, communication, conflict, motivation, inclusion, diversity, and personalities. Specifically, it addresses:
1) The importance of team cohesion and the factors needed to create and maintain cohesion such as team composition, internal environment, and management's role.
2) Potential issues with communication in teams like miscommunication and breakdowns, and tools for planning effective communication.
3) Different types of conflicts teams may face and methods for preventing and resolving conflicts, such as addressing underlying issues.
4) The role of motivation in team dynamics and ways to motivate team members.
5) How to select team members and lead
This document provides an overview of a book about Microsoft Office 2010. It includes the table of contents, copyright information, and discusses features for envisioning possibilities, expressing yourself effectively, and collaborating in Office and around the world. The summary explores new capabilities in Office 2010 for visual communication, teamwork, and working from anywhere using a variety of devices.
This chapter discusses programming techniques that apply to all programs, including those without input. The basic principle of keeping programs simple is introduced, along with corollaries of not speculating on future additions and writing your own subroutines. Subsequent chapters will build on these ideas to describe a specific type of program that can be expanded from simple to complex to handle a variety of problems through a problem-oriented language.
This document provides information about Macromedia Flash trademarks and copyright. It lists many Macromedia product names and technologies that are trademarks. It also acknowledges third party technologies used in Macromedia products and the copyright year of the document.
This document provides an overview of the Microsoft Project 2013 Step by Step guidebook. It teaches project management concepts and skills using a step-by-step approach. The guidebook allows the user to learn at their own pace through hands-on practice files and lessons. It covers topics such as creating and scheduling project plans, assigning resources, tracking progress, and communicating status through custom reports.
This document provides an overview of the Toastmasters leadership development program outlined in the manual "Competent Leadership". The manual contains 10 projects focused on different leadership skills that members complete by serving in various meeting roles. Completing all 10 projects earns the Competent Leader award. The manual is part of Toastmasters' two-track program for developing communication and leadership skills, with opportunities for additional recognition at advanced levels. Members work through the manual under the guidance of a mentor and vice president of education to strengthen their abilities in areas like listening, planning, motivation and team building.
Inglés 1° medio teens club guia del profesorLuis Hc
This document provides information about an English textbook for teenagers called Teens Club. It includes a student's book, teacher's book, and CD. The student's book contains 5 units on topics relevant to teenagers like teen life, challenges, technology, music, and careers. Each unit has reading and listening lessons with activities to develop language skills. The teacher's book provides guidance for teaching with suggestions for lessons, managing large classes, and evaluating students. It aims to make English learning appealing for teenagers by relating to their interests and experiences.
This document provides an overview of an English textbook for 1st year secondary students in Chile. It includes the following key details:
- The textbook is divided into 5 units covering topics relevant to teenagers' lives. Each unit includes reading and listening lessons.
- The objectives are to engage students through interesting topics, introduce current language, encourage independent learning, and provide regular review opportunities.
- In addition to the student book, the course includes a teacher's book and an accompanying CD. The student book provides instructions, activities, self-assessments and end-of-unit reviews.
- The goal is to make English learning appealing by relating it to students' lives and interests, while gradually increasing language skills and knowledge
This document is a tutorial manual for Poser 7 that covers 3D basics, Poser 7 operations, content management, adding realism through texture mapping, and other advanced topics. It includes over 100 pages of detailed instructions on using Poser 7's tools and features through step-by-step lessons. The manual is copyrighted by e frontier America, Inc. and e frontier, Inc. and requires agreeing to the product license before use. It contains chapters on topics like 3D elements, materials, lighting, animation, character creation, and the Face Room for texture mapping.
This document summarizes discussions from a workshop on C4I/Sensors (Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence) technologies for soldier systems. The workshop was organized by the Department of National Defence, Defence Research and Development Canada, and Industry Canada. Participants discussed current deficiencies in soldier C4I/sensor systems, a future vision, technical challenges, potential solutions and technologies, and areas for further collaboration. Key topics included soldier communication technologies, biometric sensors, navigation aids, and unattended ground sensors. The goal was to help guide future research and development to improve Canadian soldier systems.
The Navigating International Meetings Pocketbook gives concise information about the structure and process of United Nations (UN) meetings, looks at the different avenues available to youth for participating, and offers practical information for surviving a large meeting. The Guide also touches on important questions regarding the impact of international meetings on the local, national, and international level that every past and potential participant should consider.
Smart Speaker as Studying Assistant by Joao ParganaHendrik Drachsler
The thesis by Joao Pargana followed two main goals, first, a smart speaker application was created to support learners in informal learning processes through a question/answer application. Second, the impact of the application was tested amongst various users by analyzing how adoption and
transition to newer learning procedures can occur.
Cc pensieve technical_writing_v3_090912Adam Morgan
This document provides an overview of how to use the CCPensieve software for conferencing with students. It describes the various features of the interface including the home page, top menu bar, student and group conferring corners, calendar, and CAFE menu. Instructions are provided on installation and navigating between individual, small group, and whole class conferencing options.
This document discusses patch management best practices for keeping businesses safe from cyber attacks. It covers establishing processes for patch deployment, choosing software to deploy patches across networks, testing patches in a lab environment before production, and understanding Microsoft patching technologies. Specific topics include setting up a patch management team, configuring automatic updates, using Microsoft Baseline Security Analyzer to scan for missing patches, decoding patch installers, and deploying individual patches and updates for Windows and Office applications. The goal is to build a strong foundation for timely and effective patch management.
Group Violence Intervention: Implementation GuidePatricia Hall
This document provides an implementation guide for Group Violence Intervention (GVI), a strategy that aims to reduce group-related violence. The guide discusses establishing an executive committee and working group to oversee GVI efforts. It also covers developing a communications strategy, assessing the local violence problem through a group audit and incident review process, and implementing call-in sessions to communicate messages to groups involved in violence.
This document is a manual for children's workers to help them in personal relationships and leadership positions. It contains 14 chapters that provide principles and guidance for maintaining good personal relationships, such as controlling one's tongue, watching one's words and reactions, and solving relationship problems. It also contains 3 chapters on leadership, defining leadership, the qualities of a good leader, and the responsibilities of a leader. The overall goal is to help children's workers have smooth sailing in both their personal relationships and leadership roles.
This document is the user guide for MapBasic version 9.0. It provides information on installing and getting started with MapBasic, an overview of new and enhanced features in version 9.0, and documentation on using the MapBasic development environment. The guide includes chapters on the basics of MapBasic syntax and programming, as well as tutorials and reference material.
Romano, G. (2019) Dancing Trainer: A System For Humans To Learn Dancing Using...Hendrik Drachsler
Masters thesis by Romano, G., (2019). Dancing is the ability to feel the music and express it in rhythmic movements with the body. But learning how to dance can be challenging because it requires proper coordination and understanding of rhythm and beat. Dancing courses, online courses or learning with free content are ways to learn dancing. However, solutions with human-computer interaction are rare or
missing. The Dancing Trainer (DT) is proposed as a generic solution to fill this gap. For the beginning, only Salsa is implemented, but more dancing styles can be added. The DT uses the Kinect to interact multimodally with the user. Moreover, this work shows that dancing steps can be defined as gestures with the Kinect v2 to build a dancing corpus. An experiment with
25 participants is conducted to determine the user experience, strengths and weaknesses of the DT. The outcome shows that the users liked the system and that basic dancing steps were
learned.
This document provides information about a book that teaches how to use Microsoft PowerPoint 2007. It includes the table of contents, information about the authors, and details on how to install and use the practice files provided on the accompanying CD. The book covers starting new presentations, working with slide text and layouts, and adjusting visual design elements. It aims to help readers learn PowerPoint's features and prepare for Microsoft business certification exams.
SSTRM - StrategicReviewGroup.ca - Workshop 2: Power/Energy and Sustainability...Phil Carr
This document describes the Power/Energy/Sustainability workshop which was part of the Soldier Systems Technology Roadmap initiative to identify technologies that could contribute to a superior soldier system. The workshop focused on power/energy as it is a key enabler of soldier capabilities. Participants identified six potential collaborative projects in areas like power standards, storage, and fuel cells.
This document is the preface to "The Python Workbook" by Ben Stephenson. It introduces the purpose and structure of the book, which is to provide hands-on programming exercises in Python that can be solved using introductory Python concepts. The preface explains that approximately half of the 174 exercises include sample solutions to encourage learners to check their work and learn good programming practices. Learners can use the book to supplement another textbook or as a stand-alone resource for learning Python through practice exercises.
This document provides an overview of the symfony framework and how to build a job listing application called Jobeet using symfony. It covers topics like starting a new symfony project, creating the data model, building controllers and templates, routing, testing, forms, internationalization, plugins and deployment. The document is presented over 23 days/chapters of incremental development of the Jobeet application.
This document provides an overview and getting started guide for AutoCAD Civil 3D 2009:
- It describes how to install AutoCAD Civil 3D 2009 on a single computer or network. It also highlights new features in the 2009 release related to project management, survey, pipe networks, labels, surfaces, grading, alignments, profiles, corridors, mass haul, Google Earth integration, and hydraulics/hydrology.
- It provides an overview of sample data, tutorials, guides, and training materials that are included to help users learn how to use AutoCAD Civil 3D 2009.
- It introduces the object-based design approach in AutoCAD Civil 3D 2009 and describes tools for object management, editing,
The document discusses the importance of transparency and humility in small group settings, using examples of "Carl the angry guy" and "Jerry the addicted guy" who hide their true struggles from the group. It argues that small groups should be places where people feel safe to openly share their sins and struggles in order to experience true community and spiritual growth through mutual accountability and support.
This document introduces lernOS, an operating system for lifelong learning. It describes lernOS as a framework for developing a new mindset, skillset, and toolset for self-directed learning. The lernOS approach involves 13-week learning sprints, with weekly exercises called "katas" to practice new skills. It also emphasizes peer support through communities to help learners avoid reinventing solutions and mistakes. Learning paths are provided for beginners to develop skills in areas like working out loud, objective and key results (OKRs), and getting things done (GTD).
Georgia Common Core Coach, CCGPS Edition, Composition, Level IITriumphLearningNY
Composition exercises support students in constructing more complex, sophisticated writing, as required by the Common Core Georgia Performance Standards.
Get a comprehensive review of both the writing process and research process, in entirety. Easy-to-follow lessons focus on specific writing types that are outlined in the Common Core Georgia Performance Standards. During this program students will be integrating different sources into research papers based on a prompt.
This document provides an introduction to lernOS, which is described as an operating system for lifelong learning and learning organizations. It discusses the key components of lernOS, including the mindset, skillset, and toolset that make up the "lernOS wheel". Specific 21st century skills are identified that are important for individuals to develop. Examples of relevant digital tools are also provided. The document introduces the "lernOS canvas" as a visual structure for systematically working through topics in a learning experience.
This document provides an overview of the Toastmasters leadership development program outlined in the manual "Competent Leadership". The manual contains 10 projects focused on different leadership skills that members complete by serving in various meeting roles. Completing all 10 projects earns the Competent Leader award. The manual is part of Toastmasters' two-track program for developing communication and leadership skills, with opportunities for additional recognition at advanced levels. Members work through the manual under the guidance of a mentor and vice president of education to strengthen their abilities in areas like listening, planning, motivation and team building.
Inglés 1° medio teens club guia del profesorLuis Hc
This document provides information about an English textbook for teenagers called Teens Club. It includes a student's book, teacher's book, and CD. The student's book contains 5 units on topics relevant to teenagers like teen life, challenges, technology, music, and careers. Each unit has reading and listening lessons with activities to develop language skills. The teacher's book provides guidance for teaching with suggestions for lessons, managing large classes, and evaluating students. It aims to make English learning appealing for teenagers by relating to their interests and experiences.
This document provides an overview of an English textbook for 1st year secondary students in Chile. It includes the following key details:
- The textbook is divided into 5 units covering topics relevant to teenagers' lives. Each unit includes reading and listening lessons.
- The objectives are to engage students through interesting topics, introduce current language, encourage independent learning, and provide regular review opportunities.
- In addition to the student book, the course includes a teacher's book and an accompanying CD. The student book provides instructions, activities, self-assessments and end-of-unit reviews.
- The goal is to make English learning appealing by relating it to students' lives and interests, while gradually increasing language skills and knowledge
This document is a tutorial manual for Poser 7 that covers 3D basics, Poser 7 operations, content management, adding realism through texture mapping, and other advanced topics. It includes over 100 pages of detailed instructions on using Poser 7's tools and features through step-by-step lessons. The manual is copyrighted by e frontier America, Inc. and e frontier, Inc. and requires agreeing to the product license before use. It contains chapters on topics like 3D elements, materials, lighting, animation, character creation, and the Face Room for texture mapping.
This document summarizes discussions from a workshop on C4I/Sensors (Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence) technologies for soldier systems. The workshop was organized by the Department of National Defence, Defence Research and Development Canada, and Industry Canada. Participants discussed current deficiencies in soldier C4I/sensor systems, a future vision, technical challenges, potential solutions and technologies, and areas for further collaboration. Key topics included soldier communication technologies, biometric sensors, navigation aids, and unattended ground sensors. The goal was to help guide future research and development to improve Canadian soldier systems.
The Navigating International Meetings Pocketbook gives concise information about the structure and process of United Nations (UN) meetings, looks at the different avenues available to youth for participating, and offers practical information for surviving a large meeting. The Guide also touches on important questions regarding the impact of international meetings on the local, national, and international level that every past and potential participant should consider.
Smart Speaker as Studying Assistant by Joao ParganaHendrik Drachsler
The thesis by Joao Pargana followed two main goals, first, a smart speaker application was created to support learners in informal learning processes through a question/answer application. Second, the impact of the application was tested amongst various users by analyzing how adoption and
transition to newer learning procedures can occur.
Cc pensieve technical_writing_v3_090912Adam Morgan
This document provides an overview of how to use the CCPensieve software for conferencing with students. It describes the various features of the interface including the home page, top menu bar, student and group conferring corners, calendar, and CAFE menu. Instructions are provided on installation and navigating between individual, small group, and whole class conferencing options.
This document discusses patch management best practices for keeping businesses safe from cyber attacks. It covers establishing processes for patch deployment, choosing software to deploy patches across networks, testing patches in a lab environment before production, and understanding Microsoft patching technologies. Specific topics include setting up a patch management team, configuring automatic updates, using Microsoft Baseline Security Analyzer to scan for missing patches, decoding patch installers, and deploying individual patches and updates for Windows and Office applications. The goal is to build a strong foundation for timely and effective patch management.
Group Violence Intervention: Implementation GuidePatricia Hall
This document provides an implementation guide for Group Violence Intervention (GVI), a strategy that aims to reduce group-related violence. The guide discusses establishing an executive committee and working group to oversee GVI efforts. It also covers developing a communications strategy, assessing the local violence problem through a group audit and incident review process, and implementing call-in sessions to communicate messages to groups involved in violence.
This document is a manual for children's workers to help them in personal relationships and leadership positions. It contains 14 chapters that provide principles and guidance for maintaining good personal relationships, such as controlling one's tongue, watching one's words and reactions, and solving relationship problems. It also contains 3 chapters on leadership, defining leadership, the qualities of a good leader, and the responsibilities of a leader. The overall goal is to help children's workers have smooth sailing in both their personal relationships and leadership roles.
This document is the user guide for MapBasic version 9.0. It provides information on installing and getting started with MapBasic, an overview of new and enhanced features in version 9.0, and documentation on using the MapBasic development environment. The guide includes chapters on the basics of MapBasic syntax and programming, as well as tutorials and reference material.
Romano, G. (2019) Dancing Trainer: A System For Humans To Learn Dancing Using...Hendrik Drachsler
Masters thesis by Romano, G., (2019). Dancing is the ability to feel the music and express it in rhythmic movements with the body. But learning how to dance can be challenging because it requires proper coordination and understanding of rhythm and beat. Dancing courses, online courses or learning with free content are ways to learn dancing. However, solutions with human-computer interaction are rare or
missing. The Dancing Trainer (DT) is proposed as a generic solution to fill this gap. For the beginning, only Salsa is implemented, but more dancing styles can be added. The DT uses the Kinect to interact multimodally with the user. Moreover, this work shows that dancing steps can be defined as gestures with the Kinect v2 to build a dancing corpus. An experiment with
25 participants is conducted to determine the user experience, strengths and weaknesses of the DT. The outcome shows that the users liked the system and that basic dancing steps were
learned.
This document provides information about a book that teaches how to use Microsoft PowerPoint 2007. It includes the table of contents, information about the authors, and details on how to install and use the practice files provided on the accompanying CD. The book covers starting new presentations, working with slide text and layouts, and adjusting visual design elements. It aims to help readers learn PowerPoint's features and prepare for Microsoft business certification exams.
SSTRM - StrategicReviewGroup.ca - Workshop 2: Power/Energy and Sustainability...Phil Carr
This document describes the Power/Energy/Sustainability workshop which was part of the Soldier Systems Technology Roadmap initiative to identify technologies that could contribute to a superior soldier system. The workshop focused on power/energy as it is a key enabler of soldier capabilities. Participants identified six potential collaborative projects in areas like power standards, storage, and fuel cells.
This document is the preface to "The Python Workbook" by Ben Stephenson. It introduces the purpose and structure of the book, which is to provide hands-on programming exercises in Python that can be solved using introductory Python concepts. The preface explains that approximately half of the 174 exercises include sample solutions to encourage learners to check their work and learn good programming practices. Learners can use the book to supplement another textbook or as a stand-alone resource for learning Python through practice exercises.
This document provides an overview of the symfony framework and how to build a job listing application called Jobeet using symfony. It covers topics like starting a new symfony project, creating the data model, building controllers and templates, routing, testing, forms, internationalization, plugins and deployment. The document is presented over 23 days/chapters of incremental development of the Jobeet application.
This document provides an overview and getting started guide for AutoCAD Civil 3D 2009:
- It describes how to install AutoCAD Civil 3D 2009 on a single computer or network. It also highlights new features in the 2009 release related to project management, survey, pipe networks, labels, surfaces, grading, alignments, profiles, corridors, mass haul, Google Earth integration, and hydraulics/hydrology.
- It provides an overview of sample data, tutorials, guides, and training materials that are included to help users learn how to use AutoCAD Civil 3D 2009.
- It introduces the object-based design approach in AutoCAD Civil 3D 2009 and describes tools for object management, editing,
The document discusses the importance of transparency and humility in small group settings, using examples of "Carl the angry guy" and "Jerry the addicted guy" who hide their true struggles from the group. It argues that small groups should be places where people feel safe to openly share their sins and struggles in order to experience true community and spiritual growth through mutual accountability and support.
This document introduces lernOS, an operating system for lifelong learning. It describes lernOS as a framework for developing a new mindset, skillset, and toolset for self-directed learning. The lernOS approach involves 13-week learning sprints, with weekly exercises called "katas" to practice new skills. It also emphasizes peer support through communities to help learners avoid reinventing solutions and mistakes. Learning paths are provided for beginners to develop skills in areas like working out loud, objective and key results (OKRs), and getting things done (GTD).
Georgia Common Core Coach, CCGPS Edition, Composition, Level IITriumphLearningNY
Composition exercises support students in constructing more complex, sophisticated writing, as required by the Common Core Georgia Performance Standards.
Get a comprehensive review of both the writing process and research process, in entirety. Easy-to-follow lessons focus on specific writing types that are outlined in the Common Core Georgia Performance Standards. During this program students will be integrating different sources into research papers based on a prompt.
This document provides an introduction to lernOS, which is described as an operating system for lifelong learning and learning organizations. It discusses the key components of lernOS, including the mindset, skillset, and toolset that make up the "lernOS wheel". Specific 21st century skills are identified that are important for individuals to develop. Examples of relevant digital tools are also provided. The document introduces the "lernOS canvas" as a visual structure for systematically working through topics in a learning experience.
This document provides an overview of a group's work on the Build and Deployment (B&D) subproject of the Giraf project over 4 sprints. The group worked to improve the development environment, mapped dependencies between apps and libraries, changed an app into a standalone library, managed Google Play and Google Analytics, spearheaded a renaming process, and maintained the product backlog as product owners. Their efforts focused on streamlining the build process and deployment of the Giraf apps to make the project ready for future semesters.
Georgia Common Core Coach, CCGPS Edition, Composition, Level ITriumphLearningNY
Composition exercises support students in constructing more complex, sophisticated writing, as required by the Common Core Georgia Performance Standards.
The first two lessons of Georgia Common Core Coach, CCGPS Edition, Composition provide the foundation for the remaining lessons. With the first lesson walking students through the writing process from start to finish, and the second lesson taking them through the entire research process. The second unit of the book offers lessons on specific writing types that are outlined in the Common Core Georgia Performance Standards.
The Battle Against Common Core StandardsQuietly and almost wit.docxmattinsonjanel
The Battle Against Common Core Standards
Quietly and almost without notice, an initiative which significantly erodes local and state control of school curriculum has passed in 46 states. The Common Core Standards Initiative sets Math and English curriculum in every participating state at the same level. In adopting this “common core” states are relinquishing their right to compose their own education requirements.
Only Alaska, Nebraska, Virginia, and the great state of Texas have refused adoption of the Common Core Standards. State legislators in Indiana, Georgia, Alabama, and South Dakota have introduced repeal measures, but it is so far unclear how successful these measures will be.
One state however has a very real chance to throw off the “one size fits all” standard and preserve a measure of independence in their curriculum. Which state would have the nerve, foresight, intelligence, and independent spirit required for such an effort? Michigan.
That’s right; the state responsible for the tragic disaster that is Detroit, we now find taking a stand in favor of responsible self-governance. The one-time bastion of progressive ideology has seemingly begun a slow policy shift. Tired of being embarrassed, its legislators may finally make true progress possible in the state beginning with reversal of the Common Core Standards Initiative.
Largely a product of the 2009 stimulus plan Democrats passed in congress, the Initiative is a bureaucratic, top-down program heavily influenced by special interests. The Obama administration encouraged the states’ adoption of this initiative by providing incentives through his Race to the Top program. The program was $4.35 billion dollars of carrots swinging in front of fifty hungry rabbits.
The new standards are indeed tougher than many currently in place, but there is also the danger of states being disincentivized from ever raising standards beyond the initiative.
More dangerous still is the misplaced emphasis on common mass learning. Children do not fully “learn” through memorization. Drilling children until they memorize the curriculum may help them pass a test but rarely results in true understanding. Furthermore each child is different, and strictly teaching the “common core” will only impede exceptional students from reaching beyond the mediocre.
In his article “Do We Need a Common Core?” Nicholas Tampio states the problem quite succinctly. “The class… has gone from one where teachers, aides, parents, and students work hard to create a rewarding educational experience, to one where the teachers and students use materials designed by a major publishing house.”
In short, responsibility has shifted from the classroom to educational bureaucrats. Incentives to be creative in the classroom have disappeared.
Putting a stop to implementation of the Common Core would preserve a measure of sovereignty for states to dictate their own, individualized requirements. The Michigan lawmaker introducing the bill, Republica ...
This document provides an overview of The eLearning Guild's Handbook of e-Learning Strategy. It includes a foreword discussing the importance of strategy in e-learning and a table of contents outlining the various chapters in the book. The chapters cover topics such as developing an e-learning strategy, transitioning to e-learning, design strategies, marketing and change management, elements of a successful strategy, and strategies for learners. It also includes sponsored content sections promoting Adobe e-learning solutions.
The E Learning Guild’S Handbook Of E Learning StrategyHidayathulla NS
This document is the table of contents for "The eLearning Guild's Handbook of e-Learning Strategy". It provides an overview of the book, which contains chapters written by various authors on developing and implementing an effective e-learning strategy. The document lists the chapter titles and brief descriptions of the topics covered in each chapter, such as keeping the strategy focused, strategies for transitioning to e-learning, design strategies, and elements of a successful strategy. It also acknowledges sponsors and provides information on how to cite and distribute the content.
This document is an introduction to The eLearning Guild's Handbook of e-Learning Strategy. It includes a foreword by Marc Rosenberg emphasizing the importance of developing an e-learning strategy differentiated from tactics, with a long-term view, and defined measures of success. The document then provides information about the authors, table of contents, and sponsored content advertisements. It introduces the handbook as a resource for developing successful e-learning strategies.
This document is an introduction to The eLearning Guild's Handbook of e-Learning Strategy. It includes a foreword discussing the importance of strategy in e-learning and provides an overview of the contents of the handbook, which includes chapters on developing an e-learning strategy, transitioning to e-learning, design strategies, marketing and change management, key elements of a successful strategy, and strategies for learner success. It is intended to help organizations and individuals develop effective e-learning strategies.
M.Sc Dissertation: Simple Digital LibrariesLighton Phiri
My M.Sc. dissertation... it took me a total of 2 years and 61 days to finish--I LOVE TO COUNT! There are a few publications [1] based on this work---there is even a book chapter on the way.
You will notice from the structure of the manuscript that I used Information Mapping [2] principles. The content on the other hand is structured chronologically---based on the sequence of activities I undertook during my research.
I typeset the entire manuscript using LaTeX [3] and I am VERY proud of myself for doing that :p You would have to see the TeX source files [4] to see all corresponding packages I used. Block diagrams were rendered using PSTricks [5] and plots using R ggplot2 [6] package.
[1] http://scholar.google.co.za/citations?user=UIb4aEsAAAAJ&hl=en
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information_mapping
[3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LaTeX
[4] https://github.com/lightonphiri/open-msc-thesis
[5] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSTricks
[6] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ggplot2
This document is the preface to the book "Python for Everybody" by Dr. Charles R. Severance. It discusses how the book was created by remixing and adapting the existing book "Think Python" under a more open license, with the goal of shifting the focus from computer science to data analysis using Python. Major changes were made to reorder and replace topics with a data-oriented approach. The preface provides background on the motivation and process for creating this new textbook.
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This document is the preface to the book "Python for Everybody" by Dr. Charles R. Severance. It discusses how the book was created by remixing and adapting the existing book "Think Python" by Allen B. Downey, while shifting the focus from computer science to data analysis using Python. Major changes were made to the examples and exercises to make them more data-oriented. New chapters were also added on topics like regular expressions, web scraping, databases, and data visualization. The goal is to teach useful Python skills to students from various fields who want to work with data, not necessarily become professional programmers. Permission was obtained to release the adapted material under a Creative Commons license rather than the original GNU license.
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This document provides an overview of the contents of an English textbook. It includes sections on conditional sentences, the present perfect tense, expressing likes and preferences, and relative pronouns. It also lists the generic competencies students are expected to develop and the sections included in each textbook block, such as situational activities, readings, learning activities, and assessment tools. The publisher and authors are identified and copyright information is provided.
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The document provides an overview of lernOS, which is described as an "operating system for lifelong learning". It is centered around a 13-week learning sprint model where participants work on objectives and complete exercises from a learning path. The document outlines the key components of lernOS, including the mindset, skillset, and toolset that learners should focus on developing. It emphasizes values like networking, trust, openness, participation and agility. Important skills include problem solving, communication, collaboration and digital literacy. Learners work through learning paths during a sprint and reflect on their progress at the end to continually improve their learning.
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12. Design Sprint Framework
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4. lernOS for You Guide Version 1.5 (2019-12-16)
1 Preface
The verb „lernos“ is the future tense of „learning“ in the Esperanto language (mi lernos = I will learn, ni
lernos = we will learn). lernOS is an operating system for lifelong learning and learning organizati-
ons. But lernOS is not software, it’s „brainware“. It is a way to think and act to be successful in the 21st
century as an individual, a team or a whole organization.
There are three guides that describe the approach on the individual level (lernOS for You), the team
level (lernOS for Teams), and the organizational level (lernOS for Organizations). Additionally there is
the lernOS Toolbox describing commonly used methods and tools (e.g. Podcasting, Expert Debriefing,
Barcamps, Sketchnoting). lernOS is not invented on the green field but a compilation of existing and
tested methods. All guides are available under the open Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY)
license on the lernOS Website1.
If you have further questions regarding lernOS or need peer support you can freely join the commu-
nity platform CONNECT2 and the lernOS CircleFinder3 or write with #lernOS4 on Twitter. The mastery
of lernOS is a matter of months or years not hours or days. So Keep Calm & Learn On!
Yours @simondueckert
2 License
lernOS Guides are released under the Creative Attribution 4.0 International5 (CC BY 4.0) license:
You are free to:
• Share - copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format.
• Adapt - remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially.
Under the following terms:
• Attribution - You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if
changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests
the licensor endorses you or your use.
1
https://lernos.org
2
https://community.cogneon.de
3
https://community.cogneon.de/c/lernos/lernos-circlefinder
4
https://twitter.com/search?q=%23lernOS
5
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.en
Simon Dueckert 4
5. lernOS for You Guide Version 1.5 (2019-12-16)
• No additional restrictions - You may not apply legal terms or technological measures that
legally restrict others from doing anything the license permits.
3 Introduction
We are facing enormous challenges driven by globalization, digitization, and a fast rate of technological
and scientific progress. At the same time those changes provide us with a lot of new opportunities for
development. The future is uncertain and we cannot predict it. So we need to be open and ready for it
(Source: Learning Framework 20306).
To navigate through the so called VUCA7 world of the 21st century full of volatility, uncertainty, complexi-
ty, and ambiguity teenagers, students, professionals, managers, and leaders have to upskill themselves.
Everybody has to develop skills like creativity, critical thinking, communication, and collaboration.
Digital literacy is important to be able to use digital tools productively. The personal motivation for
development should be more than getting a well-paid job or making profit. Everybody should care
about the well-being of himself, his friend & families, his communities, and the society. We need to
learn what knowledge, skills, mindset, attitudes, values, methods, and tools we need to design and
shape a better future together.
lernOS for You can help you to get fit for the 21st century. lernOS helps to organize the daily, weekly,
and monthly activities and to learn consciously from every action. It will also promote networking with
6
http://www.oecd.org/education/2030
7
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volatility,_uncertainty,_complexity_and_ambiguity
Simon Dueckert 5
6. lernOS for You Guide Version 1.5 (2019-12-16)
other people so you don’t have to reinvent every wheel and repeat every mistake.
And the best thing is: lernOS is free, open, and easy to understand. Start using it today!
3.1 lernOS Sprints: Lifelong Learning in 13 Weeks Timeboxes
lernOS is practiced in timeboxes of 13 weeks called learning sprints like in scrum8. Normally sprints run
along the quarters of a year but the rhythm can be changed if necessary. A sprint can be done alone
(lernOS Soloist), in pairs (lernOS Tandem) or in a group of 4-5 persons (lernOS Circle).
Abbildung 1: lernOS Sprint
This is what happens during a lernOS sprint:
• Week 0: The sprint planning. Does everybody understand the process? When will the weekly
meeting be? Which learning path is chosen? For lernOS tandems and circles: Will the weekly
be face-to-face or virtual? Which tools are used for communication and documentation? Is
everybody able to use the tools?
• Weeks 1-11 with the Weekly Meeting: It is worked on the objectives and desired results and
the progress is critically reflected in the weekly. A learning path suggests exercises, which are
called Katas as in CoderDojos9. Three learning paths are available for beginners (NOOBs): WOL
8
https://scrumguides.org
9
https://coderdojo.com
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7. lernOS for You Guide Version 1.5 (2019-12-16)
learning path (open and connected working and learning), OKR learning path (targeted and
focused working and learning) and GTD learning path (stress-free and productive working and
learning). The recommendation is to select only one learning path per sprint and not to mix the
learning paths in tandems or circles. The two pit stops in week 4 and week 8 help to see whether
everyone is still on the right track.
• Week 12 with the Retrospective: Review of the final results of the sprint and retrospective of
the entire process. For learning tandems and circles: The participants decide whether they want
to stay together for another sprint.
At school and university, the pace of learning is determined by school years and semesters. In order to
structure the learning afterwards in a self-organized way, the lernOS sprints are planned in extreme
cases up to the end of one’s life (from the cradle to the cradle), just as Peter Drucker did it10.
3.2 lernOS Wheel: Mindset, Skillset, and Toolset
Mastering the VUCA world of the 21st century requires to be open for change and new approaches.
There are a lot of tools and methods out there. But when one is not open to give it a try, experiment,
and fail there will be no success. Like the people with the „square wheels“ in the image below we are
often too busy to see new opportunities.
Abbildung 2: lernOS Wheel People
10
https://www.inc.com/magazine/19970201/1169.html
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8. lernOS for You Guide Version 1.5 (2019-12-16)
Adopting new practices in life, school, or work is not only about using digital tools. To switch from
„square wheels“ to „round wheels“ the personal attitude, values, and skills have also to be taken
into account. lernOS calls these three dimensions mindset, skillset, and toolset. To focus only on
some dimensions might help. But for the best results all three should be considered in the personal
development process.
Abbildung 3: lernOS Wheel
3.2.1 Mindset: Your Attitude and Values
The mindset can be described as the attitudes and values that lead to actions and visible results. These
develop over time and form the culture of organizations and society. When we act in the world we get
feedback and learn from it. Over time our mind creates mental models of the world and values that
guide our future actions (Boisot, 200411). To successfully navigate the VUCA world these five values are
important to be successful (Buhse 2014 & Petry, 2014):
1. NETWORKING over isolation
2. TRUST over suspiciousness
3. OPENNESS over silos
4. PARTICIPATION over exclusion
5. AGILITY over stability
11
http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/thermo/20388.pdf
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9. lernOS for You Guide Version 1.5 (2019-12-16)
There is no ranking in the values above but for some people openness12 seems to be the core value
for a 21st century mindset. It means being open to new experiences, knowledge, and ideas as well as
sharing knowledge, ideas, and content openly (see also the Open Definition13). You should develop an
„open first mindset“ over time as described in the Open First Manifesto14:
Abbildung 4: Open First Manifesto
12
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Openness
13
https://opendefinition.org
14
http://innovationsbeirat.de/open-first
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ProTip: your mindset is not fixed it can grow over time. Watch Carol Dweck’s video on Developing a
Growth Mindset15 to learn more about it.
3.2.2 Skillset: Your Capabilities
Since the 1980s skills like solving problems and interacting with others in creative ways became most
important to be successful. These are also skills that can’t be easily replaced by automation and
artificial intelligence in the future. To get fit for the 21st century you have to train the following skills
(Framework for 21st Century Learning16, DigiComp 2.1 Framework17):
You
can use this table to do a self assessment at the beginning of a lernOS Sprint. The levels 1-5 are
according to the Dreyfus model of skill acquisition18 (1 = Novice, 2 = Advanced Beginner, 3 = Competence,
4 = Proficient, 5 = Expert). Just put your current skill level in the „As-Is“ column and your desired skill
level in the „To-Be“ column. You can then set a focus for your learning activities.
Skill As-Is To-Be
Creativity and Innovation
Think creatively
15
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hiiEeMN7vbQ
16
http://www.p21.org/our-work/p21-framework
17
https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/en/publication/eur-scientific-and-technical-research-reports/digcomp-21-digital-
competence-framework-citizens-eight-proficiency-levels-and-examples-use
18
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dreyfus_model_of_skill_acquisition
Simon Dueckert 10
11. lernOS for You Guide Version 1.5 (2019-12-16)
Skill As-Is To-Be
Work creatively with others
Implement innovations
Critical Thinking And Problem Solving
Identifying needs and technological responses
Reason effectively
Make judgments and decisions
Solve technical and non-technical problems
Creatively using technologies to solve problems
Communication
Articulate thoughts and ideas clearly and effectively
Listen effectively to decipher meaning
Use communication to inform, instruct, motivate and persuade
Utilize multiple media and technologies
Communicate effectively in diverse environments
Collaboration
Work effectively and respectfully with diverse teams
Exercise flexibility and willingness to be helpful in making necessary
compromises to accomplish a common goal
Assume shared responsibility for collaborative work, and value the
individual contributions
Interacting, engaging, sharing, and collaborating through digital
technologies
Managing digital identity
Digital Literacy
Browsing, searching, filtering data, information and digital content
Evaluating and managing data, information and digital content
Protecting digital devices, personal data and privacy
Developing, integrating, and re-elaborating digital content
Simon Dueckert 11
12. lernOS for You Guide Version 1.5 (2019-12-16)
Skill As-Is To-Be
Handling Copyright and licences
Programming, Scripting, and Coding
ProTip: the Mozilla Foundation has developed the Web Literacy Framework19 with a lot of exercises for
developing digital literacy and 21st century skills.
3.2.3 Toolset: Digital Tools You Use
With the emergence of Web 2.020 in 2005 social media entered the stage. Not everybody needs to
know all the tools but you should have an overview, know the principles, and choose the right tools for
yourself. The conversation prism21 gives a nice overview of web 2.0 platforms available today:
Abbildung 5: Conversation Prism 5.0 (conversationprism.com) by Brian Solis and JESS3
19
https://learning.mozilla.org/en-US/web-literacy
20
https://www.oreilly.com/pub/a/web2/archive/what-is-web-20.html
21
https://conversationprism.com
Simon Dueckert 12
13. lernOS for You Guide Version 1.5 (2019-12-16)
For a beginner 28 categories and dozens of tools might be overwhelming. Therefore the following list
provides an overview of the most relevant tools for learnOS:
1. Office & Productivity, e.g. Dropbox, Evernote, Freemind, G Suite, MindManager, Office 365,
OneNote, SharePoint, Trello, XMind
2. Chat & Messenger, e.g. Google Hangouts Chat, Mattermost, Microsoft Teams, RocketChat, Slack,
Telegram, Threema, WeChat, WhatsApp
3. Social Networks, e.g. IBM Connections, Jive, LinkedIn, Mastodon, Twitter, Workplace by Face-
book, Xing, Yammer
4. Videoconference, e.g. Google Hangouts Meet, GoToMeeting, Microsoft Teams, Skype, Skype for
Business, WebEx, Zoom
5. Weblogs & Wikis, e.g. Confluence, DokuWiki, LinkedIn (Article), MediaWiki, Medium, tumblr,
Wikipedia, Wordpress
ProTip: the lernOS Wiki22 contains a list with links to all the mentioned tools. There will be tutorials on
how to use them in the future.
3.3 lernOS Circle: The Power Of Peer Support
If you do not want to practice lernOS on your own you can do it in a group of 4-5 people called a learning
circle. A circle is a peer support23 group in which members help each other with feedback, experience,
knowledge, and reflection. The circle is a circle of trust: what happens in the circle stays in the circle!
The circle members will have a weekly meeting with a standard agenda to structure the learning and
development process.
22
https://github.com/cogneon/lernos-core/wiki
23
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_support
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14. lernOS for You Guide Version 1.5 (2019-12-16)
Abbildung 6: Learning Circle
Alearningcirclemeetsonceaweek.Eachmeetinghasastandardizedagendawithacheck-in,suggested
exercises called lernOS Katas (see appendix for the weekly agendas and the exercise descriptions), and
a check-out. The timebox for the weekly can be adopted to the needs of the circle members, suggested
timeslot is Friday between 11-12am.
ProTip: Kata is just another term for exercise. It comes from practicing programming skills in a peer
learning format. Read more about this format at codekata.com24.
The weekly meeting can be face-to-face or virtual. The circle has to define tools for communication
and documentation between the meetings. The following tools have proven to work in practice:
• Microsoft Teams
• OneNote
• SharePoint
• Skype
• Skype for Business
• Slack
• WebEx
• WhatsApp
• Yammer
24
http://codekata.com
Simon Dueckert 14
15. lernOS for You Guide Version 1.5 (2019-12-16)
• Zoom
If you have an Enterprise Social Network (ESN) like Jive or Connections in your organization that might
also be a good option to support lernOS Circles.
ProTip: To have a good usability choose a tool that supports communication and documentation,
e.g. Microsoft Teams25. In Microsoft Teams you can use the channel „General“ for chat-based com-
munication, the audio/video conferencing feature for virtual meetings and a OneNote Notebook for
documentation.
4 Learning Paths for Newbies (NOOBs)
A lernOS learning path is a collection of exercises (Katas) with which you learn new skills and develop
a new attitude over time. A learning path can be followed within a lernOS sprint. lernOS beginners*
(NOOBs) can choose from one of three learning paths:
Abbildung 7: lernOS Lernpfade für Einsteiger*innen
1. WOL Learning Path: in this learning path you’ll learn to work open and connected, as well
as how to make your results visible and to narrate about it. The learning path is based on the
Working Out Loud Circle Guides26 by John Stepper.
25
https://products.office.com/en-us/microsoft-teams/group-chat-software
26
https://workingoutloud.com/de/circle-guides
Simon Dueckert 15
16. lernOS for You Guide Version 1.5 (2019-12-16)
2. OKR Learning Path: this learning path helps you to work and learn goal-oriented and focused.
It is not only about everyday goals, but also about the big goals in work and life (Moonshots).
The learning path is based on the method Objectives & Key Results27. (OKR) from Google.
3. GTD Learning Path: In this learning path you learn to be productive in the multitude of tasks
and to keep track of every situation in a stress-less way. The learning path is based on the
method Getting Things Done28 (GTD) by David Allen.
ProTip: Only one of the three learning paths should be chosen for a sprint. All three learning paths can
be completed in follow-up sprints. Tandems and circles should not mix learning paths, otherwise you
won’t be able to benefit from each other’s experiences in the weekly.
4.1 WOL Learning Path
Sharing your knowledge openly and profiting from the knowledge of others helps that not everyone
has to reinvent the wheel over and over again. According to the Working Out Loud method29 by John
Stepper, you can
1. Learn To set your own learning goal for the sprint.
2. Identify people and communities that are related to your goal.
3. Publishcontributionsandshowappreciationtobuildanetworkinasystematicandgoal-oriented
way.
4. Use the support of your new network to achieve your goals faster and easier.
This learning path is a shortened to 11 exercises version of the circle method by John Stepper (31
exercises). However, the basic idea „Working Out Loud = Observable Work + Narrating Your Work“ by
Bryce Williams30 remains.
4.1.1 Design Your Future Backwards (Kata)
Design your future by reflecting on present and past and creating your personal vision (30 Mi-
nutes)
This kata is based on the method The Future, Backwards31 by Dave Snowden. The kata i s used to get a
better overview of the bigger picture by looking in the past and the possible futures. The horizon of
focus for the kata can be short-term (1-2 years), medium-term (3-5 years) or long-term (whole life).
Instruction:
27
https://rework.withgoogle.com/guides/set-goals-with-okrs/steps/introduction/
28
https://gettingthingsdone.com/what-is-gtd/
29
https://workingoutloud.com/en/circle-guides
30
https://thebryceswrite.com/2010/11/29/when-will-we-work-out-loud-soon/
31
https://cognitive-edge.com/methods/the-future-backwards/
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17. lernOS for You Guide Version 1.5 (2019-12-16)
1. Prepare your Future Backwards Canvas (example32). This can be a landscape piece of paper with
a „Y“ on it rotated by 90 degrees to the right indicating the present (current state), the past, the
vision (heaven), the antivision (hell) and the stairway to heaven. Define the timespan you want
to look back and forth (short-/medium-/long-term) (5 Minutes)
2. Describe the current state in 3-5 short phrases (5 Minutes)
3. Describe the 3-5 key events in the past that led to the current state (5 Minutes)
4. Describe your vision in 3-5 short phrases (5 Minutes)
5. Describe your anti-vision in 3-5 short phrases (5 Minutes)
6. Describe the 3-5 key events that need to happen to make your vision come true and avoid your
anti-vision (5 Minutes)
ProTip: Helmut Hoensch ([@GoodTransfer](https://twitter.com/GoodTransfer)) created a LearningS-
printBooklet33 (German only) that contains a template for a future backwards.
4.1.2 Think visual with the lernOS Canvas (Kata)
A canvas is a visual structure that can be used to work through several building blocks in a systematic
way. This way you use a canvas as a visual checklist. It can also be used to tell a complex story. The idea
came from Alex Osterwalder who invented the business model canvas34. The lernOS Canvas uses the
same basic structure as the business model canvas. But the names of the building blocks have been
changed to reflect the topics a circle works on during a sprint.
The lernOS Canvas can be downloaded from the lernOS Website35 in different formats (e.g. PowerPoint,
PDF, PNG). To be able to work with the canvas in an agile way one should NEVER write on a canvas ...
that’s why sticky notes were invented!
32
https://cognitive-edge.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/3---ChrisFl-IMG-0058-wpcf_300x225.jpg
33
34
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_Model_Canvas
35
https://lernos.org
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Abbildung 8: lernOS Canvas
The header of the canvas contains the creation date, the number of the sprint, and a motivation/mission
statement (if you have one). In the building block „My Objectives & Key Results“ the goals for the
current sprint are documented. The building blocks „My Roles“, „My Activities“, „My Projects“, and
„My Knowledge & Skills“ can be used to identify potential objectives. „My Relationships“ and „My
Social Networks“ can be used to identify people that can help you to achieve your objectives. Available
resources (e.g. documents, checklists, videos etc.) are listed in „My Knowledge Assets“. The repositories
listed at „My Repositories“ can be used to share assets generously with the network.
4.1.3 My Objective For The Next 12 weeks (Kata)
In this kata you choose your objective for the sprint.
Duration: 25 minutes
What do you want to accomplish in the next 12 weeks? Pick an objective that you really, really care
about and you can make progress towards in the sprint. You will use Google’s OKR method to define
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that objective. For the NOOB path it’s not prio 1 to achieve the objective. Core is to learn how to achieve
objectives more easy with the help of an open workstyle and the development of a network.
Select an objective for the next 12 weeks. Use the questions „Do I really, really care?“, „Can I achieve it
in 12 weeks?“, and „Can my network help me?“ to test if the objective is appropriate for the sprint. If
you have problems to find a good objective think about goals that support your roles, activities, or
projects. If you want to help to make the world a better place you can also choose an objective that is
related to the United Nation’s 17 sustainable development goals36.
Use the principles from objective & key results (OKR) to specify your objective. Define an objective and
write it down below. To help you to track progress define 2-4 key results per objective. You should be
able to measure the key results on a scale from 0.0-1.0. To make sure to set yourself ambitious goals a
completion rate of 0.7 is regarded as a success.
I will (objective): ...
as measured by (key results):
1. ...
2. ...
3. ...
4. ...
Further Information:
36
https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/sustainable-development-goals
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• Wikipedia Article SMART Criteria37
• MIT Sloan Article With Goals, FAST Beats SMART38
• TED Talk How We Can Make the World a Better Place by 203039
• Video How Google Sets Goals: OKRs40 with Google ventures partner Rick Klau
• Book Introduction To OKRs41 by Christina Wodtke
• Book The Beginner’s Guide To OKR42 by Felipe Castro
4.1.4 People Related To Your Objective (Kata)
In this kata you will start to think about people who might help you with your objectives (Working
alone is addition, working together is multiplication!).
Duration: 20 minutes
Most tasks we do have been done by others before. Most of the mistakes we make, have been made
in the past already. You can gain access to knowledge and experiences related to your objectives by
getting in touch with experienced people inside and outside your organization. Strong relationships are
based on trust, sharing, and caring. Dale Carnegie43 said „You can make more friends in two months by
becominginterestedinotherpeoplethanyoucanintwoyearsbytryingtogetotherpeopleinterestedin
you“. So how do you get in touch with people related to your objectives and develop the relationship?
Create a list of at least ten people related to your objectives. If you don’t know people by name you
can also put roles or descriptions on the list (e.g. „best WoW player in wown“, „a good camera man“,
„owner of company XY“). Use your contact lists or social networks find more people:
1. ...
2. ...
3. ...
4. ...
5. ...
6. ...
7. ...
8. ...
9. ...
10. ...
37
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMART_criteria
38
https://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/with-goals-fast-beats-smart
39
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o08ykAqLOxk
40
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mJB83EZtAjc
41
https://www.oreilly.com/business/free/files/introduction-to-okrs.pdf
42
https://felipecastro.com/resource/The-Beginners-Guide-to-OKR.pdf
43
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dale_Carnegie
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Further Information:
• Video Social Networking In Plain English44
4.1.5 Your First Sharing Experience (Kata)
In this kata you start to share attention, knowledge, experiences, and assets with your network to build
trust and get support.
Duration: 20 minutes
Sharing is caring! In the digital world sharing is often seen as giving others access to files or digital
content. But it can also be as simple as sharing your attention with another person by following him,
liking his content or subscribing to his website. By sharing you deepen your relationships with every
contribution you make.
Gothroughyourrelationshiplistandlookforsomekindofonlinepresenceforeachperson(e.g.website,
blog, profile in social network). Look for possibilities to share some attention. This might be a follow
button, a like button, a subscribe field, a five star rating, a comment field or a contact form. Make at
least five sharing experiences:
1. ...
2. ...
3. ...
4. ...
5. ...
4.1.6 An Appointment With Yourself (Kata)
In this kata you will make sure that you have enough time for networking, sharing, and caring for your
network. You will do this by making appointments with yourself. In this week your objectives should
be stable and you should have a clear idea which people in the network might help you to get your
things done.
Duration: 15 minutes
Do you spend enough time for your personal development and for working on your personal objectives?
A lot of people are busy with their daily tasks and do not care enough for their development and their
well-being. A good approach is to make an appointment with yourself and reserve that time for yourself
in the calendar.
44
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6a_KF7TYKVc
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Check your calendar and see when an appointment with yourself fits in. One hour or even 30 minutes
a week is a good starting point. Put an appointment with yourself in the calendar. If possible make it a
recurring event so taking time for yourself can become a habit. Make at least five appointments:
1. ...
2. ...
3. ...
4. ...
5. ...
4.1.7 Go Google Yourself! (Kata)
In this kata you will look yourself up in the intranet or internet.
Duration: 10 minutes
What do people see when they search for you online? Do they get an idea of who you are and how they
might help you with your objectives? You can simulate that situation by googling yourself (often called
egosurfing, egosearching or vanity search).
Open a search engine in the internet or intranet and enter your name. Open at least the first 10 search
results and check if your personality and the facts about you are up-to-date. Identify possible improve-
ments:
1. ...
2. ...
3. ...
4. ...
5. ...
6. ...
7. ...
8. ...
9. ...
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10. ...
Think about what your main online profile might be (e.g. LinkedIn profile, about.me profile or profile
in your enterprise social network). This will be called your „digital twin“:
My main online profile (digital twin) is ...
Further Information:
• Wikipedia Article Egosurfing45
• Article Google Yourself! Measuring the performance of personalized information resources46 by
Thomas Nicolai and Lars Kirchhoff.
4.1.8 25 Facts About Me (Kata)
In this kata you will collect facts and personal information that might be relevant for your network and
help you to connect.
Duration: 25 minutes
What are interesting facts about you that might help to connect with other people? If you apply to study
at Fuqua Business School you have to write an essay with a list of 25 random things about yourself so
the application team gets to know you better. When you write down facts about yourself you collect
information that might help you to make new connections based on similar interests and backgrounds
(e.g. „We studied in the same place 20 years ago!“). Random things about yourself might include:
• Life experiences
• Your likes/dislikes
• Where you were born/lived
• Family, kids, parents
• Schools, universities
• Workplaces in the past
• Career challenges
• Vacations
• Hobbies
• Achievements
• Fun facts
• Anything that helps to understand what makes you who YOU are
45
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egosurfing
46
http://snurb.info/files/aoir2008/Google%20Yourself!%20Measuring%20the%20performance%20of%20personalized%
20information%20resources%20%28AoIR%202008%29.pdf
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Create a list of 10 random facts about yourself. Then read the Fuqua 25 random things do’s and dont’s47
and expand your list to 25 things:
1. ...
2. ...
3. ...
4. ...
5. ...
6. ...
7. ...
8. ...
9. ...
10. ...
11. ...
12. ...
13. ...
14. ...
15. ...
16. ...
17. ...
18. ...
19. ...
20. ...
21. ...
22. ...
23. ...
24. ...
25. ...
Further Information:
• YouTube-Search „random facts about me“48
4.1.9 Your Top 10 Assets (Kata)
In this week kata you will reflect on your top 10 knowledge assets that you can share in your network.
Duration: 30 minutes
47
https://stratusadmissionscounseling.com/duke-fuqua-25-random-things-dos-donts
48
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=random+facts+about+me
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What are the most valuable resources related to your objectives that you can share? A resource could be
a book, a video, a link, a document, a checklist, a presentation etc. When you organize your resources in
a way that they are linkable and shareble it will be easy for you to contribute them to your network.
Chose one of your objectives and list at least ten related resources you find useful or interesting:
1. ...
2. ...
3. ...
4. ...
5. ...
6. ...
7. ...
8. ...
9. ...
10. ...
4.1.10 Update Your Digital Twin (Kata)
In this kata you will check if your digital twins like website, blog or profile do match your wishes and if
not you will go out and update them.
Duration: 20 minutes
Does your main digital twin represent you in the way you want to? A lot of people register for an account
in a social network and never think about updating their profile. You should keep your profile up to
date and have a look at it on a regular basis (e.g. have a recurring task every three month). The facts
about you, current projects and interests should be visible on that profile.
Check in the online profile if you have a nice image, a short description, and a slogan. List the improve-
ments you want to make:
1. ...
2. ...
3. ...
4. ...
5. ...
6. ...
7. ...
8. ...
9. ...
10. ...
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4.1.11 Find Communities Related To Your Objectives (Kata)
In this kata you will look for communities or groups that can help you to reach your objectives.
Duration: 15 minutes
A tribe according to Seth Godin49 is a group of people connected to one another, connected to a leader,
and connected to an idea. Instead of tribe the term „community“ or „community of practice“ is also
often used. A group needs only two things to be a tribe: a shared interest and a way to communicate.
Tribes need leadership. Sometimes one person leads, sometimes more. Which are the communities
related to your objectives?
Look for communities that are related to your objectives and find at least 10 (use e.g. LinkedIn Groups50,
Facebook Groups51, Xing Groups52 , meetup.com53, reddit.com54):
1. ...
2. ...
3. ...
4. ...
5. ...
6. ...
7. ...
8. ...
9. ...
10. ...
4.1.12 Contribute Your Self (Kata)
In this kata you will use the facts about yourself to make a personal connection. And you will learn that
sometimes listening is more important then talking.
Duration: 35 minutes
Not all contributions in your network have to be about your objectives. Sometimes it’s good to share
something about yourself to make a personal connection. The list of facts about yourself might help
to find interesting links to other people. Try to find these possible links and use them to make a
connection.
49
https://www.ted.com/talks/seth_godin_on_the_tribes_we_lead
50
https://www.linkedin.com/groups
51
https://www.facebook.com/groups
52
https://www.xing.com/communities
53
https://www.meetup.com
54
https://www.reddit.com/reddits
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Exercise (20 minutes):
Go through your facts about you and find at least one fact that might be of interest for a person on
your relationship list. Write a message to that person and try to deepen the relationship with that fact
as a contribution:
1. ...
4.1.13 Write A Letter To Your Future Self (Kata)
In this kata you will start to envision yourself in the future by writing a letter to your future self. And
you will help your network to support you by making your vision and your objectives visible on your
online profiles.
Duration: 35 minutes
The letter to your future self is a classic method in self motivation and visioning. You reflect on your
current situation and give your future self an advice. You write it down as a letter, address it to yourself
and open it in the future. With the letter in the back of your mind chances are that your wishes become
a self-fulfilling prophecy55.
Write a letter to your future self. Talk about who you are now (e.g. summary, fears, values, beliefs, skills,
abilities, goals, hopes). Then address your future self with the things you want to stop/continue/start
doing. Give yourself advice and ask yourself questions. Seal the letter and store it in a safe place or use
services like futureme.org56 to send it to your future self automatically:
55
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-fulfilling_prophecy
56
https://futureme.org
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Further Information:
• Video A Letter To My Future Self57
• Article How to Write a Letter to Your Future Self58
4.2 OKR Learning Path
Set yourself ambitious goals (objectives) and define tangible results (key results) can be very motivating.
Many people have a long someday-maybe-list, but they don’t get things done. The longer the list, the
bigger the hurdle to start. Google therefore uses the simple Objectives & Key Results (OKR) method,
which defines the goals for next three months according to the following criteria:59
• Objectives are ambitious and may feel somewhat uncomfortable.
• Key results are measurable on a scale from 0 - 1.0 (or 0-100%).
• OKRs are transparent so everyone can see what others are working on.
• The „sweet spot“ for an OKR grade is 60% – 70%; if someone consistently fully attains their
objectives, their OKRs aren’t ambitious enough and they need to think bigger.
• Low grades should be viewed as learning opportunities to help refine the next OKRs.
57
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XwN0tJlXF-0
58
https://www.wikihow.com/Write-a-Letter-to-Your-Future-Self
59
https://rework.withgoogle.com/guides/set-goals-with-okrs/steps/introduction/
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• In companies, OKRs are NOT(!) synonymous with employee evaluations.
• OKRs are not a shared to-do list.
With the following Katas, you can learn OKRs for setting your own goals in a sprint. It doesn’t matter if
you’re in an organization or a company that’s already using OKR, or whether you’re just using OKRs for
yourself.
4.2.1 Top 10 Sources of OKRs (Kata)
Learn about the history and basics of Objectives & Key Results (OKRs).
Duration: 60 minutes
The history of OKRs goes back several decades. In 1975, John Doerr took part in a training course at
Intel in which Andy Grove explained the theory of OKRs (book tip: High Output Management60). In 1999
John Doerr worked for the venture capital company Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, which had just
invested in the startup Google. That way the OKR method reached Google. In the foreword of Doerr’s
book Measure What Matters: OKRs: The Simple Idea that Drives 10x Growth,61 Google founder Larry
Page describes the effect of OKRs as:
OKRs have helped lead us to 10x growth, many times over. They’ve helped make our crazily bold
mission of ’organizing the world’s information’ perhaps even achievable. They’ve kept me and
the rest of the company on time and on track when it mattered the most.
In the following, I have compiled some sources with which you can familiarize yourself with the method.
Select material from the following list and learn the basics of OKRs:
1. Set Goals with OKRs62 (en) - if you choose only one source, take this one! Google describes on
about 10 pages how they understand and use OKRs for agile goal planning.
2. OKR63 (en) - English Wikipedia page on OKRs with many web links and sources. More information
in other Wikipedia language versions is available via the voice switching in the left sidebar.
3. How Google sets goals: OKRs64 (en) - Video recording (1 hour 22 minutes) of a Startup Lab
workshop with Rick Klau of Google Ventures, in which Rick also shows original slides by John
Doerr.
60
https://amzn.to/2O9sA4u
61
https://amzn.to/2XVI1Bv
62
https://rework.withgoogle.com/guides/set-goals-with-okrs/steps/introduction
63
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OKR
64
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mJB83EZtAjc
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4. Introduction to OKRs65 (en)- 37-page introduction to OKR by Christina Wodtke ([@cwodt-
ke](https://twitter.com/cwodtke)) with the story and concrete tips for starting with OKRs.
5. The Beginner’s Guide to OKR66 - 50-page introduction to OKRs by Felipe Castro ([@meetfeli-
pe](https://twitter.com/meetfelipe)) with many examples and concrete tools for action.
6. Objectives and Key Results: The Book67 (en) - 31-page eBook by Alexander Maasik ([@AMaa-
sik](https://twitter.com/AMaasik)) with basics on OKRs and examples from the weekdone soft-
ware .
7. Objectives and Key Results68 (en) - White Paper by Ben Lamorte () Operator of the website
okrs.com69.
8. Giant Talk Podcast70 (en) - Podcast on the OKRs of There Be Giants, an OKR consultancy from
the UK.
9. OKR Community Report 201771 (en) - Survey conducted by the Workpath Institute with over
300 participants and case studies by HolidayCheck, MyMuesli and Flixbus.
10. OKRs and digital organizations72 (en) - Introduction to OKRs by workpath73, an OKR software
provider from Munich.
4.2.2 Set up your OKR environment (Kata)
Plan time and space for your OKR process.
Duration: 30 minutes
It doesn’t take much for your personal OKR environment. You need to schedule check-in time in the
calendar each week (e.g. Monday morning, 30 minutes). You also need a place to document your OKRs.
This can be analog (e.g. paper, whiteboard) or digital (e.g. OneNote, Wiki). You have to decide whether
or not to make your OKRs public the first time. Keep in mind that the smaller the circle of people who
know your goals, the less can help you achieve your goals.
Define your OKR environment now:
• OKR Weekly Check-in (weekday, time): ...
• OKR Documentation: ...
65
https://www.oreilly.com/business/free/files/introduction-to-okrs.pdf
66
https://felipecastro.com/resource/The-Beginners-Guide-to-OKR.pdf
67
http://okrbook.com
68
https://www.okrs.com/2016/12/bens-white-paper
69
https://okrs.com
70
https://www.therebegiants.com/the-official-okr-podcast
71
https://www.workpath.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/okr-community-report2017.pdf
72
https://www.workpath.com/okr-plus
73
https://workpath.com
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4.2.3 Define OKRs for your Sprint (Kata)
Write down your objective and key results for this sprint in OKR format.
Duration: 30 minutes
In the last kata you (hopefully) learned a lot about the formulation of OKRs. Now you can apply this
to the planning for the running sprint. To do this, use John Doer’s OKR formula to formulate your
objective:
I want (objective): .......... as measured by .......... (Key Results):
Check your objective with the following criteria (source: Google):74
• The objective is demanding and feels a bit uncomfortable.
• The Objective uses phrases that trigger new activities (not: keep, continue).
• The Objective uses phrases that describe an end state (e.g. "climb the mountain", "ship feature
Y").
• The Objective uses tangible and unambiguous terms. It should be clear to an outsider whether a
goal has been achieved or not.
Check your key results against the following criteria:
• Not more than three key results are defined per objective.
• The key results express measurable milestones that bring you closer to the objective when you
reach it.
• The key results are measurable and can be measured on a scale of 0.0 - 1.0 (or 0 - 100%).
• The key results express results, not activities. The wording of a key result should not include
words such as "advice," "help," "analyze," or "participate."
• Measurable milestones should include proof of completion. And this evidence should be visible,
credible and easily comprehensible.
4.2.4 Finalize your OKRs for the Sprint (Kata)
Check your OKRs for the sprint and freeze it.
Duration: 30 minutes
74
https://rework.withgoogle.com/guides/set-goals-with-okrs/steps/set-objectives-and-develop-key-results/
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You’ve had a few nights to rethink your OKRs. Do you feel comfortable and motivated by it? Do the
objectives feel demanding? Do you see a realistic chance of achieving the key results at 60-70%. Rethink
your OKRs and set yourself up for this sprint. Document the OKRs in the OKR environment.
4.2.5 Perform your Weekly Check-In (Kata)
Start with a short OKR Weekly Check-In each week
Duration: 30 minutes
With the OKR Weekly Check-in you can see your goals and the current state on a weekly basis. This
helps you not to lose focus and to identify and remove obstacles early.
You have already set the time of your check-in and added it as a regular date in the calendar. Use the
following questions for the OKR Weekly Check-in:
• Progress: What has changed in key results since the last Weekly?
• Trust: How sure am I to achieve the key results?
• Barriers: What hinders my progress?
• Next steps: What can I do to improve progress?
Usethenextfourweekstomakethecheck-inaweeklyroutine.Everyweek,you’lllearnaboutadditional
topics around OKRs in a small 15-minute learning nugget.
4.2.6 Tools for OKRs (Kata)
Learn about some tools for OKRs.
Duration: 15 minutes
David Allen often describes Getting Things Done (GTD) as "tool-agnostic". This means that you can
practice GTD independently of special software or apps. Similarly for OKRs paper and pencil are enough,
yet many practitioners use digital tools for it. Check out examples of OKR tools this week and decide if
you want to use them:
• Texteditors, e.g. Microsoft Word, Google Doc
• Spreadsheet, e.g. Microsoft Excel, Google Sheets
• Note taking applications, such as Microsoft OneNote, Evernote
• To-do list tools, e.g. Trello, Microsoft To-Do, Microsoft Planner, Jira
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• Wikis, e.g. Mediawiki, Confluence, TiddlyWiki, Etherpad
• Enterprise OKR-Tools, e.g. 7Geese, WeekDone, Workpath
4.2.7 Scoring vs. Measuring Key Results (Kata)
Understand the difference between "scoring" and "measuring" and choose your path.
Duration: 15 minutes
Google recommends that OKRs to measure key results always on a scale of 0-1.0. In his Beginners Guide
to OKR,75 Felipe Castro describes some of the drawbacks of this approach under the heading "Forget
Scoring":
• The rating on the scale from 0 - 1.0 is very subjective
• If you want to define per key resultin advance, what 0.3, 0.7 etc. means, the complexity of the
process increases
Therefore Felipe recommends using value-based key results and measuring them easily. In his opinion
this simplifies the process of defining OKRs for oneself and also for teams.
Check out your key results and consider whether the process would be simplified for you by simply
measuring instead of scoring on the 0-1.0 scale. Choose an approach and adjust your key results if
necessary.
4.2.8 Stretch Goals and Moonshots (Kata)
Learn the meaning of "Strech Goals" for setting challenging goals.
Duration: 15 minutes
Strech Goals or Moonshot OKRs (derived from Kennedy’s Moonshot Goal 1962) are objectives that seem
impossible to achieve. For exampleinstead of asking yourself "How do I get 10% better/faster?" ask
"How do I get better/faster by a factor of 10". This forces you to leave your comfort zone and think about
other practices, skills and other know-how.
Look at your objectives and think about which you could transform into Moonshot OKRs from and
what the consequences would be for you. If you want to try Moonshot OKRs, decide whether you want
to customize the OKRs for this sprint or a following sprint.
75
https://felipecastro.com/resource/The-Beginners-Guide-to-OKR.pdf
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4.2.9 What is your Confidence Level? (Kata)
How sure are you that you will reach your OKRs?
Duration: 15 minutes
According to Henrik-Jan van der Pol by perdoo the OKR Confidence Level76 shows how much you
believe that the OKR is (still) achievable. Henrik-Jan proposes the three levels "on-track", "off-track"
and "at-risk". The estimate of an OKD confidence level is also presented by Christina Wodtke in the
book Introduction to OKRs.77 She recommends a scale of 1-10, with a 1 saying "a miracle would have to
happen" and a 10 "Yeah, I can do that".
Check out the two sources and decide if you also want to have confidence levels for your OKRs. If so,
consider where and when to put them in your documentation.
4.2.10 Individual vs. Team/Organizational OKRs (Kata)
Get to know the interaction of OKRs at the levels of the individual, the team and the organizati-
on.
Duration: 30 minutes
As well described in Rick Klau’s How Google sets goals: OKRs78 video, OKRs are not only defined
at the individual level, but also at the level of teams, departments, and the entire organization. In
contrast to other target agreement systems such as Management by Objectives79 (MbO), however, this
is not a top-down process, but both top-down (recommendation John Doerr: 40%) and bottom-up
(recommendation John Doerr: 60%).
Consider whether you can use the method in your environment, such as your team or department in
addition to your personal OKRs. Consider at least one try to test whether your environment is open to
OKRs and how to implement it there.
4.2.11 OKR Review (Kata)
Was your OKR cycle successful and what topics are for the next one?
Duration: 60 minutes
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https://www.perdoo.com/blog/okr-confidence-levels/
77
https://www.oreilly.com/business/free/files/introduction-to-okrs.pdf
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79
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In Scrum, the Sprint Review80 is used to check the results (increments) at the end of the sprint (Inspect)
and adjust them for the next sprint (Adapt) if necessary. In Scrum, the review is different from the
Sprint Retrospective,81 which is about team interaction, not results.
Franziska Schneider from Workpath suggests in a blog82 to make a review at the end of an OKR cycle
and ask yourself the following questions:
• Was I successful with my OKRs?
• What are the topics for the next OKR cycle?
• Where can/should I present the results of the review?
Now perform an OKR review for the current sprint and document the results.
4.3 GTD Learning Path
Organizing and optimizing yourself and your way of working can be very motivating. Many people
today face the problem of being in the hamster wheel of daily and routine activities not having time
for value-adding things, let alone thinking about where they want to develop in the medium or long
term.
AllelementsofGTDhavebeenusedsuccessfullyforalongtime.DavidAllenhascompiledandcombined
some of these methods in a way that the sum is greater than the parts.
GTD is a way to create the space in our VUCA world to make us fit for the future.
The challenge: You must have read the book83 to really understand GTD.
The solution: By gradually understanding the rules and principles, as well as practicing it (Katas) within
the next 13 weeks, you understand the overall context and build up your individual GTD-system.
4.3.1 Get to know the basics (Kata)
Duration: 120-180 minutes depending on reading speed, reading depth and available/missing materi-
als
The basics of GTD are documentary in many places on the Internet & in literature. Get acquainted with
the basics of GTD this week and create an environment that puts you in an optimal situation. This
environment is based on the three pillars of time, location and tools. ThePillarTimetreatwe later.
80
https://www.scrumguides.org/scrum-guide.html#events-review
81
https://www.scrumguides.org/scrum-guide.html#events-retro
82
https://www.workpath.com/magazine/wie-sie-einen-effektiven-okr-zyklus-gestalten/
83
https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/3492307205/ref=as_li_tl
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• Read Chapters 1, 2 & 4 in David Allen’s book "How to Get Things Done"
• Put your work material like storage baskets, pens, folders, sticky note slips together
• Reposition your workspace(s) (Office, Home etc.)
ProTip: Minimize the number of your inbound baskets; 1x Office, 1x Home, 1x electronic (e-mail).
ProTip: e-mails generally remain: in the e-mail system and are managed digitally there.
ProTip: Forward and manage all other electronic inputs to the e-mail system.
ProTip: Often throwingsomething away.
ProTip: Active deactivation of newsletters, mail distributors, mailing stations etc.
4.3.2 Collect - Mind Sweep (Kata)
Duration: 60-120 minutes depending on reading speed and number of "loose ends" in the head
You’re probably carrying a lot of things around with you in your head and new items are coming in all
the time. All these loose ends lower your ability to focus and get things done. The following exercise
will help you to get free your head without loosing anything.
• Read Chapter 5 in David Allen’s book "How to Get Things Done".
• Now write down everything that goes through your mind. What to do now & soon? What needs
to be donenow? Who is to call?
• One page per idea or task (heading is sufficient).
• Put each sheet in your inbox.
In this exercise, the mass counts. Don’t stop until no more items are coming.
4.3.3 Processing - The 2 minute rule (Kata)
Duration: 60-90 minutes depending on reading speed and number of small items
This week you will work your inbox and consistently apply the 2-minute rule: everything that can be
done in less than 2 minutes is done immediately.
• Read Chapter 6 in David Allen’s book "How to Get Things Done".
• Take 10-15 minutes a day for "small stuff".
• Work focused on everything from answering emails, appointments, tweets, likes, feedback, calls
etc.
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• Unimportant stuff can be immediatly disposed (a Timer helps with timeboxing).
4.3.4 Organize - Build Lists & Contexts (Kata)
Duration: 60-120 hours depending on reading speed and deepening urge
When organizing your tasks with GTD you have a lot of possibilities to individualize. But also a minimal
set of lists and contexts will support you to keep the overview.
• Read Chapter 7 in David Allen’s book "How to Get Things Done".
• Choose the list types you want to use (minimum: project list, action list, calendar and wait-for
list). Important but non-essential lists are reference material, one-day/maybe, support material
for actions, support material for projects.
• Define the contexts you want to use (e.g.: @Home, @Work, @Unterwegs, @Besorgungen, @In-
ternet, @Anruf, next action, @Lesen).
An example: Do you commute regularly by train to work and back? Then you can easily filter by contexts
@travel and @read and only get those tasks that make sense when commuting.
ProTip: At the beginning, less is more. Start with a few but essential things. In the iteration phases
(from week 8) the things you are missing are automatically added.
4.3.5 Review - The Weekly Review (Kata)
Duration: 60-120 minutes depending on reading speed and deepening urge
The review phase in GTD has a slightly different character than the previous phases. It is mainly used
to keep your system up to date and is therefore the heart of the system. You will only be able to rely on
your system if you go through this phase regularly. In addition to regular brief views of your system,
the weekly review is at the heart of this phase.
• Read Chapter 8 in David Allen’s book "How to Get Things Done".
• Find a suitable date for the weekly review and enter it as a repeating event in your calendar (1-2
hours should be already).
• Run through the weekly review once for the last week
1. Everything in the inbox which you haven’t put there until then
2. Empty the inbox
3. See through next steps
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4. Browse through the dates (did To-Do’s come out of it ?)
5. See through upcoming dates (are To-Do’s included for you in preparation for the appoint-
ment?)
6. Check the Waiting-for-list
7. Browse the list of projects
8. Mind Sweeping
ProTip: To make the weekly review as pleasant as possible, connect it to things that are pleasant and
fun for you. For example, your favorite drink, favorite place, favorite music or your favorite time.
4.3.6 Doing (Kata)
Duration: 2-4 hours depending on reading speed
At this stage, we choose what to do. Two basic principles will support you in this.
• Four criteria for completing tasks. Filtering tasks by context/time/energy/priority.
• The three-stage model for evaluating daily work. Division into the three types of work (define
tasks, predefined tasks, unplanned tasks).
• Read Chapter 9 in David Allen’s book "How to Get Things Done" (without the 6-step model)
• Choose the day that you want to consciously work on the complete phase
• Consider all three types of work for your scheduling
– Plan time for several daily reviews (overview)
– Schedule time for "Organize and Process"
– Schedule time for completing scheduled tasks (enter appointments with yourself in the
calendar)
– Schedule time for completing unplanned tasks (leave room in the calendar)
• Your day is planned - Then get an overview of the upcoming tasks and get going
ProTip: Your calendar day should NEVER be fully planned. 20% buffer for unplanned tasks is a good
rule of thumb.
ProTip: When you make appointments with others always plan 5 minutes less (e.g.: 25 instead of 30
minutes or 55 instead of 60 minutes)-
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4.3.7 Projects - Become like the kids (Kata)
Duration: 60-180 minutes depending on reading speed, number of projects & project size
Projects have their own definition in GTD. Anything that takes more than one step to be completed
AND that can be done within a year is called a project. Projects are more complex tasks that run in
sequence or in parallel. Therefore it is important to get an idea of the target state and to go through the
whole project at the beginning.
• Read Chapter 3 und10 in David Allen’s book "How to Get Things Done".
• Work through a new or existing project according to these rules and transfer the results to your
GTD system.
In preparation for the following weeks, please schedule these dates and appointment series in your
calendar:
• Once: 2-3 hours for Kata - Desk-Sweep
• 1-2 daily very short appointments (5-15 minutes) for "Process and Organize"
• 1 appointment weekly review (90-120 minutes), if not already done in the respective Kata
• Collecting is done continuously or is part of the weekly review
4.3.8 Work through the 5 phases (Kata)
Duration: 120-240 minutes
You have dealt intensively with the individual 5 phases of GTD in the last 7 weeks. You’ve got all the
necessary materials, set up your workplace, set up your individual system, prepared lists & contexts
and practiced the weekly review. And you know how to identify the next action.
Now in theory, you know everything you need to know to get the whole process going. Every single
phase in itself is important, but only as a closed cycle the process will unfold its full potential for you.
You’re ready! Starting this week, we’ll get the whole system up and running. Continue to work through
the 5 phases of GTD this week.
Initial - Desk Sweep
• Now you start to put everything around your workplace to a very simple exam. Take EVERY thing
in your hand and ask The One Question: Can this be eliminated?
• If so, dispose of it immediately, otherwise put it in your inbox.
• Repeat this process until everything has gone through your slopes. Moreisnottodo.
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• Tip: Start locally (on the square) and expand your searches for stuff & things in a concentric way
(desk surface, drawers, storage areas, cabinets, floors & shelves, etc.).
Then go through phases 1-5 iteratively again and again.
4.3.9 The Power of the Next Step (Kata)
Duration: 120-180 minutes depending on reading speed & number of projects
According to David Allen the question "What is the next step?"** is essential to generate measurable
improvements in the process. This question forces clarity, responsibility, productivity and increased
competence.
• Read Chapters 11, 12 and 13 in David Allen’s book "How to Get Things Done".
• To all the tasks that need to be done next in your lists add the context @NextAction.
• Ad the question "What is the next step?" into your daily routine.
Iterate the 5 phases again this week. If it works, keep going. If it doesn’t work, adapt your system.
ProTip: Consider whether you always want to add additional attributes when creating a new task. E.g.
time required or energy required. This will help you decide in Phase 5 what is important NOW.
ProTip: If possible, always formulate your (project) tasks from the result: "The auto-inspection is
carried out", "The project has been accepted", "The board has decided X or Y".
4.3.10 The 6-horizon model (Kata)
Duration: 60-180 minutes depending on reading speed & altitude
A third model, besides the "Four Criteria" and the "Three Steps" from the Kata "Complete", can help
us to reflect our own work even better. Assuming that we are proficient on levels 0-2 (actions, projects
and areas of responsibility) through the consistent application of our GTD system. We will focus now
on levels 3-5 (future factors, orientations and intentions).
We should do this regularly, but at least once a year.
• Read Chapter 9 (The 6-Step Model) in David Allen’s book "How to Get Things Done".
• Start thinking about what goals you want to set for the next 1-2 years. Write each idea down.
• Then focus on a time horizon that is 3-5 years in the future. Where do you want to be then? Where
will your company be? What external influences will directly or indirectly affect you? Write each
idea down.
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• Finally consider what purpose your existence had and should have had in a time much further
than 5 years in the future. Write each idea down.
• Process the notes and decide if there’s something you really, really want to get going. If not,
dispose all ideas.
• Decide on the ideas that are left over, what you want to do with it. Such as
• Create a new project
• Put on the list Some day / Maybe
• Work out even more ideas for the future (with a partner or friend)
• Share ideas with others and ask for feedback
• Get professional help (e.g. coach)
• Set up an appointment in your calendar (< 12 months) on which you want to repeat this exercise
ProTip: For this exercise, look for a place where nothing doesn’t bother you.
ProTip: Choose a time at which you have a lot of energy.
ProTip: Make sure you don’t have a follow-up event to this exercise.
4.3.11 Continuous Improvement - The Road to Mastery (Kata)
Duration: 1-3 hours depending on reading speed & number of ideas
We have already got to know and practice two of the three stages on the way to the mastery in the last
weeks. Applying the basics and the 6-horizon model. For experts focus, orientation and creativity are
still on the agenda. It is simply a matter of using the gained time to endlessly optimize the experience.
• Read Chapter 15 in David Allen’s book "How to Get Things Done".
• Choose 1-3 ideas from the last Kata.
• Continue to work out these ideas for concrete projects and tasks.
– What needs to be started now to fulfill the ideas and wishes in 2-5 years?
– Discuss these ideas with people whose advice you value.
– Develop a network of new contacts that can help you achieve your goals.
• Outsource more and more "thinking" to your GTD System
– Find an area you haven’t captured in your GTD system yet.
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– Integrate these areas into your GTD routines.
• Set up an appointment in your calendar (< 3 months) on which you want to repeat this exercise.
ProTip: The WOL Learning Path is the ideal support to help you build a network of contacts that can
help you achieve your goals.
5 Stop talking, start doing!
If you read through this guide but are not practising yet you should do so NOW! To start with lernOS is
really easy. These five steps will help to start smoothly:
1. Schedule Time: define the quarter when you begin to use lernOS. Add the time-slots for the
weekly to your calendar. This regular meeting is of particular importance if you practice in a
lernOS Circle.
2. Define Objectives and Key Results: use week 0 to define the objectives and the measurable
results for the sprint. Choose an objective you really, really care about.
3. Find a Circle: look for 3-4 people who want to start a sprint in the same quarter. If someone has
been in a circle before he can take the role of the „Circle Moderator“.
4. Organize the Weekly Meeting: if you don’t know each other meet face-to-face in week 0. Use
social networks or instant messengers to communicate between the meetings. Use video confe-
rencing tools to organize virtual meetings.
5. Plan, Do, Learn, Repeat: Use the last weekly meeting in week 12 to reflect the results and the
collaboration in the circle. Decide if you want to run another sprint together.
Keep Calm & Learn On! :-)
6 Appendix
6.1 Circle Moderator Checklist
ProTip: if you want to use OneNote or Microsoft Teams in the circle, you can have a look at the lernOS
Circle Template84 (available in German and English). The template can be used to document the
circle.
WEEK 0 - Sprint Planning & Get Together
When you are new to the circle you will get to know each other in week 0. You will plan when to meet,
which tools to use and who is the moderator is.
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https://github.com/cogneon/lernos-core/tree/master/lernOS%20Circle%20Template
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• Check-in: Welcome Everybody! (5 minutes)
• Get together: Who are you? Introduce yourself. Five minute timebox per Circle member. (25
minutes)
• Sprint Planning see below (25 minutes)
• Check-out: Confirm the next meeting. (5 minutes)
Define a circle moderator who cares for event and time management. The moderator is not the „boss“
of the circle but just a normal member that cares for smooth operation. Define which of the learing
paths you will use. Define the day and time of your weekly circle meeting. Define if you meet face-to-face
or virtually . Define the tools you use for communication and documentation in the circle. Decide which
exercises from the suggested agenda you plan to do in the circle. Also decide if you want to use the
lernOS Canvas (see chapter lernOS Canvas) as supporting tool.
• Circle moderator: ...
• Learning path: WOL / OKR / GTD
• Day & time of weekly meeting: ...
• Weekly meetings are: face-to-face / virtual
• Tools used in circle: ...
• Do we use the Canvas: yes / no
ProTip: everybody should do the Katas „Design Your Future Backwards“ and „Think visual with the
lernOS Canvas“ in week 0 to find the right objectives for the lernOS Sprint.
ProTip: in a lot of circles the timebox for running an exercise in the Weekly is too short. You should use
the method inverted classroom85. Every circle member prepares the exercises as „homework“ upfront
so you will have more time to discuss results in the circle.
ProTip: if you use the lernOS OneNote Circle Template you can take a photo of the current version of
the canvas and upload so the other circle members can see it and give feedback.
WEEK 1
• Check-in: What happened since the last check-in? What changed in the key results? What is
slowing me down? Two minute timebox per circle member. (10 minutes)
• WOL Learning Path Kata: Share your objective(s) in the circle. The objective might be refined
until week 4 but not later. (45 minutes)
• OKR Learning Path Kata: tbd.
• GTD Learning Path Kata: tbd.
• Check-out: What will I do until the next Weekly? One minute timebox per circle member. (5
minutes)
85
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flipped_classroom
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WEEK 2
• Check-in: What happened since the last check-in? What changed in the key results? What is
slowing me down? Two minute timebox per circle member. (10 minutes)
• WOL Learning Path Kata: Share your list in the circle and let others help to complete it. (45
minutes)
• OKR Learning Path Kata: tbd.
• GTD Learning Path Kata: tbd.
• Check-out: What will I do until the next Weekly? One minute timebox per circle member. (5
minutes)
WEEK 3
• Check-in: What happened since the last check-in? What changed in the key results? What is
slowing me down? Two minute timebox per circle member. (10 minutes)
• WOL Learning Path Kata: Discuss your sharing experiences in the circle. (45 minutes)
• OKR Learning Path Kata: Discuss the OKRs in the Circle and give each other feedback. (45
minutes)
• GTD Learning Path Kata: tbd.
• Check-out: What will I do until the next Weekly? One minute timebox per circle member. (5
minutes)
WEEK 4 & Pitstop 1
• Check-in: What happened since the last check-in? What changed in the key results? What is
slowing me down? Two minute timebox per circle member. (10 minutes)
• WOL Learning Path Kata: Discuss your approaches in the circle. (45 minutes)
• OKR Learning Path Kata: Explain the final OKRs and talk about ways to achieve goals. This
shows how different the approaches of the different people can be. (45 minutes)
• GTD Learning Path Kata: tbd.
• Check-out: What will I do until the next Weekly? One minute timebox per circle member. (5
minutes)
WEEK 5
• Check-in: What happened since the last check-in? What changed in the key results? What is
slowing me down? Two minute timebox per circle member. (10 minutes)
• WOL Learning Path Kata: tbd. (45 minutes)
• OKR Learning Path Kata: Share how you organize your weeklys and what experiences you have
with the process. (45 minutes)
• GTD Learning Path Kata: tbd.
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• Check-out: What will I do until the next Weekly? One minute timebox per circle member. (5
minutes)
WEEK 6
• Check-in: What happened since the last check-in? What changed in the key results? What is
slowing me down? Two minute timebox per circle member. (10 minutes)
• WOL Learning Path Kata: Share the facts about you in the circle. (45 minutes)
• OKR Learning Path Kata: Share the experiences with your OKR environments and try out other
tools. (45 minutes)
• GTD Learning Path Kata: tbd.
• Check-out: What will I do until the next Weekly? One minute timebox per circle member. (5
minutes)
WEEK 7
• Check-in: What happened since the last check-in? What changed in the key results? What is
slowing me down? Two minute timebox per circle member. (10 minutes)
• WOL Learning Path Kata: Present the top 10 list in the circle and discuss it. (45 minutes)
• OKR Learning Path Kata: Exchange ideas about who chose which option and for what reasons.
In the following weeks you can talk about the effects and experiences again. (45 minutes)
• GTD Learning Path Kata: tbd.
• Check-out: What will I do until the next Weekly? One minute timebox per circle member. (5
minutes)
WEEK 8 & Pitstop 2
• Check-in: What happened since the last check-in? What changed in the key results? What is
slowing me down? Two minute timebox per circle member. (10 minutes)
• WOL Learning Path Kata: tbd. (45 minutes)
• OKR Learning Path Kata: Discuss your ideas and opinions about Moonshot OKRs. (45 minutes)
• GTD Learning Path Kata: tbd.
• Check-out: What will I do until the next Weekly? One minute timebox per circle member. (5
minutes)
WEEK 9
• Check-in: What happened since the last check-in? What changed in the key results? What is
slowing me down? Two minute timebox per circle member. (10 minutes)
• WOL Learning Path Kata: Talk about your lists in the circle and let the others help you to com-
plete your list. (45 minutes)
• OKR Learning Path Kata: Discuss your decisions about the OKR confidence levels. (45 minutes)
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• GTD Learning Path Kata: tbd.
• Check-out: What will I do until the next Weekly? One minute timebox per circle member. (5
minutes)
WEEK 10
• Check-in: What happened since the last check-in? What changed in the key results? What is
slowing me down? Two minute timebox per circle member. (10 minutes)
• WOL Learning Path Kata: tbd. (45 minutes)
• OKR Learning Path Kata: Discuss your approaches to spreading OKRs in the organization and
learn from each other. (45 minutes)
• GTD Learning Path Kata: tbd.
• Check-out: What will I do until the next Weekly? One minute timebox per circle member. (5
minutes)
WEEK 11
• Check-in: What happened since the last check-in? What changed in the key results? What is
slowing me down? Two minute timebox per circle member. (10 minutes)
• WOL Learning Path Kata: If you want to share the letter with your circle members just read it
out loud afterwards. (45 minutes)
• OKR Learning Path Kata: Discuss your review results. (45 minutes)
• GTD Learning Path Kata: tbd.
• Check-out: What will I do until the next Weekly? One minute timebox per circle member. (5
minutes)
WEEK 12 - Retrospective & Celebration
In this week the final iteration of your key results should be available. Talk about them and show them
in the check-in. You will reflect on the circle experience and talk about how to sustain the process. After
the weekly you should take some time to celebrate your success!
• Check-in: What happened since the last check-in? Show the final iteration of the key results. 3
minute timebox per circle member. (15 minutes)
• Your Learning Moments: Talk about the moments in the sprint that where special for your.
What are your key learnings? Discuss if you want to publish them as lernOS Story86 for other
practitioners. (20 minutes)
• After Action Review: What was the plan for the sprint? What did happened? Is there any deviati-
on? What can you learn from it? (20 minutes)
• Check-out: Are there any next steps? Will you stay together for another sprint?
• Celebration time! (timebox is up to you)
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6.2 Acknowledgments
lernOS is inspired by many of sources and thought leaders and is thus standing on the shoulders of
giants87. An overview of the roots & inspirations I have compiled in the lernos Wiki88. For this guide I
would especially like to thank:
• Hirotaka Takeuchi and Ikujiro Nonaka for introducing the term scrum for agile development
(1986).
• Jeff Sutherland and Ken Schwaber for the definition of scrum in The Scrum Guide89 (2010).
• David Allen for the method Getting Things Done90 (GTD) to show the path towards the art of
stress-free productivity (2001).
• Andy Grove for the development of the method Objective & Key Results91 (OKR) as a further
development of Peter Drucker’s management by objectives (MbO) at Intel (1980s). John Doer for
bringing OKR to Google and Rick Klau from Google Ventures for his talk How Google sets goals:
OKRs92 (2013).
• Glyn Moody (2006) and Bryce Williams (2010) for coining and defining the term Working Out
Loud. John Stepper for the design of the 12-week WOL learning program documented in the
WOL Circle Guides93 (2015). Katharina Krentz from Bosch for her many contributions to make
WOL usable in organizations to develop a learning organization.
• Johannes Müller and Tobias Müller-Zielke for the talks on OKRs and GTD at the lernOS Rock-
stars Camp 2019 and Alexander Rose for compiling the GTD learning path.
6.3 Change History
Version Bearbeitet von Beschreibung Änderung Datum
1.0 Simon Dueckert First Version of the lernOS Guide 2018-09-17
1.0.1 Simon Dueckert Acknowledgement chapter added 2018-09-17
87
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standing_on_the_shoulders_of_giants
88
https://github.com/cogneon/lernos-core/wiki
89
https://scrumguides.org
90
https://gettingthingsdone.com
91
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OKR
92
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mJB83EZtAjc
93
https://workingoutloud.com/en/circle-guides
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Version Bearbeitet von Beschreibung Änderung Datum
1.1 Simon Dueckert OKRs als Standard-Methode für
Learning Sprints, Einführung NOOB
Path mit reduziertem Kata-Set,
Umbenennung lernOS Sprint/Circle,
Einführung von Lernpfaden
2018-12-17
1.2 Simon Dueckert Guideline renamed to „lernOS Guide
for You“, lernOS logo added to cover
page, Telegram User Group replaced
by CONNECT, Mobi version (Amazon)
added to output formats, generation
of all output files via make.bat, Table
of Contents (TOC) added to html
version
2019-03-25
1.3 Simon Dückert New „high level structure“ for lernOS
Guides applied, Order in introduction
chapter changed (Sprint, Wheel,
Circle), Hashtags removed from
„ProTips“, Placeholders for OKR and
GTD learning paths added, Kata
„Design Your Future Backwards“
added to week 0, Kata „Think visual
with the lernOS Canvas“ moved to
week 0, Skillset: table of skills
expanded to act as self assessment
tool, Number of circle support tools
reduced based on WOL survey 2018,
Standardized preface added, Content
and structure in chapter
acknowledgements improved,
Standard orange backside cover
added
2019-06-17
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Version Bearbeitet von Beschreibung Änderung Datum
1.4 Simon Dückert New learning paths for OKR and GTD
added, Link to lernOS CircleFinder
added to preface, Moderator checklist
removed from learning path
(separate markdown document now),
lernOS Canvas and OneNote template
moved to lernOS Core repository,
Improved metadata creation for
E-Book versions
2019-09-16
1.5 Simon Dückert New chapter License and „CC BY“
removed from title, New definition of
mindset (attitude and values), All
format specifics moved to (resumed)
moderator checklist in appendix,
Links to web presentation and lernOS
Stories added, lernOS Circle Template
(OneNote) updated, Chapter „lernOS
Sprint“ adapted to new learning
paths, Chapter "Learning paths for
beginners revised
2019-16-12
Simon Dueckert 49