Tomorrow for our office hours, we’ll be continuing to talk about RAG (retrieval-augmented generation) with AI. This last month, I’ve been working with a tool called whyhow.ai to visualize different relationships between documents. The specific purpose I’m using this for is relating to finding relationships among research studies about a specific topic. Here’s an example looking at destructive leadership and the relationship between gaslighting and other forms of destructive leadership. Tomorrow, we are going to work through a couple of different examples. If you have ideas of what you’d like to look at, please hit reply and let me know. Register for all the AILeader Office Hours here. See you tomorrow! Jethro |
I am a speaker, podcaster, author, and coach. I help school leaders and other influential people be their best and lead effectively. My podcast Transformative Principal is the most downloaded and longest running podcast for school leaders out there.
Hi Reader, I’m hosting October’s AILeader office hours on Tuesday at 1 pm pacific. I’m looking forward to having you join me. For those who aren’t aware, AILeader office hours are where you can bring any AI problem you have to get support and ideas around solving it. This week, for the teaching part, I’m planning to talk about a new tool I’m using called Atlasti to figure out how to find connections between different topics. I’m going to be using the transcripts from Transformative Principal...
Hi Reader,I’m thrilled to share some amazing news with you! The Be Podcast Network has teamed up with Reading Is Fundamental (RIF), the leading children’s literacy nonprofit in the U.S., for a truly impactful campaign this September in honor of National Literacy Month. Our mission? To spark high-impact conversations about the importance of children’s literacy, reading engagement, and best practices for teaching and encouraging reading both in schools and at home. During this campaign, more...
Hi Reader, This is my daughter Katya. She turns 18 in one week, and she has had to learn to walk 5 times already. Here are five things I learned from watching her push through her challenges from each time she learned to walk. Let others push you! Katya's younger sister is just 19 months younger than she is. Having Down syndrome, Katya takes a while to learn things. Once she saw her sister start walking, she followed quickly! She thought, if she can do that, so can I. If you did it once, you...