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20 lessons ยท 1st Grade
๐ง Patterns are EVERYWHERE โ in numbers, shapes, nature, music, and behavior. A pattern is anything that repeats in a predictable way. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง Everything is connected! The sun grows plants โ animals eat plants โ we eat animals. Pull one thread and the whole web moves. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง One event causes another, which causes another, which causes another. Domino effect! Understanding these chains helps you predict consequences many steps ahead. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง Draw a picture of how things connect. Arrows show cause and effect. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง Nature LOVES cycles โ things go around and come back. Understanding cycles helps you predict what happens next in nature. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง A car has wheels, engine, seats, and glass. But a car is MORE than the sum of its parts โ it can DRIVE, which no single part can do alone. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง 2, 4, 8, 16, ___? Each number doubles! 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, ___? Each number is the sum of the two before it (Fibonacci!). Pattern prediction is mathematical superpowers. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง Sometimes patterns hide in plain sight. Track the weather for a month. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง Your friend knows someone who knows someone who knows a celebrity. That's a network! Social networks, computer networks, and brain networks all work similarly. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง Thermostat: room is cold โ heater on โ room warms โ heater off โ room cools โ heater on again. This negative feedback loop keeps things stable. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง Fold a paper in half. After 42 folds, it would reach the Moon! Exponential growth starts slow but becomes explosively fast. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง A butterfly flaps its wings in Brazil, and it causes a tornado in Texas โ not literally, but small changes in complex systems can lead to huge, unpredictable outcomes. Understanding small causes, big effects is one of the building blocks of strong thinking. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง When something is rare (low supply) and popular (high demand), the price goes UP. When it's common and nobody wants it, the price goes DOWN. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง Remove wolves from Yellowstone โ deer population explodes โ trees get eaten โ river banks erode โ fish habitat disappears. One change ripples through the entire ecosystem. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง History doesn't repeat exactly, but it rhymes. Empires rise, peak, and fall. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง Read 10 pages a day = 3,650 pages/year = ~18 books. Save $1/day = $365/year. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง Why do bridges collapse? Why do companies fail? Why do ecosystems die? Systems fail when key connections break, when feedback loops malfunction, or when small problems cascade. Understanding understanding how and why systems break is one of the building blocks of strong thinking. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง Design a system for keeping your room clean. What are the parts? What are the rules? What feedback loops keep it working? How do you handle when it breaks? Understanding creating your own system is one of the building blocks of strong thinking. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง Each bird in a flock follows THREE simple rules: stay close, don't crash, match speed. These simple rules create the beautiful, complex patterns of bird murmurations. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
๐ง What patterns have you discovered this month? What systems do you understand better? How has systems thinking changed how you see the world? Understanding reflecting on patterns and systems mastery is one of the building blocks of strong thinking. Let's break it down step by step. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!
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