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Posts Tagged ‘Top 3’

Here we are again. A final post for calendar year 16 on Culture of Yes.

As I close out another year, I find myself in an unexpected place. This was the easiest year of writing in the 16 years I’ve been doing this. Not because the topics were simple or the world less complicated, but because I found myself needing to write. It never felt like a chore. In a year where it would be easy to drown in bad news and uncertainty, I chose optimism. I chose curiosity. I chose to keep saying yes. And if I go back to my word for the year – I chose to thrive.

If you are wondering what you might have missed, here are the previous years Top 3 lists: 2024 (here) 2023 (here) 2022 (here) 2021 (here) 2020 (here) 2019 (here) 2018 (here) 2017 (here) 2016 (here) 2015 (here) 2014 (here) 2013 (here) 2012 (here), 2011 (here) and 2010 (here)

You know the format by now. Grab your beverage of choice and join me as I look back on what made 2025 special.

Top 3 “Culture of Yes” Blog Posts which have generated the most traffic this year:

These three posts represent so much of what I think about in my work. All Means All is at the core of everything we do in West Vancouver. It is not a slogan; it is a commitment. The graduation post has become a fairly regular share, and it forces me to think about what really matters for young people heading out into the world. And the AI post speaks to a tension I keep exploring: how technology might actually help us be more human, not less. I wrote a lot on AI this year, and it was interesting to see the most popular post was one about AI leading to less technology use.

Top 3 Blog Posts That Were My Personal Favourites:

The posts that mean the most to me are often the more personal ones. Writing about Paul Simon let me explore a relationship with music that has spanned more than 40 years. The mentors piece was hard to write but necessary as I am beginning to feel my age in this work. And the Blue Jays post reminded me why I love using sports as a lens to think about learning and life. That was quite the run for the Jays!

Top 3 Shifts in BC Education in 2025:

  • The focus on 0 to 5 and the ongoing integration of childcare and K-12 as one system
  • A renewed emphasis on early literacy and knowing where our young learners are so we can adjust quickly and nimbly
  • A steadiness that allowed the work to get done

I want to dwell on that third one for a moment. There was not a lot of drama in BC education this year. And that is a good thing. When the system is steady, educators can focus on what matters most: the students in front of them. I look at other jurisdictions across North America and they seem constantly distracted from the business of learning. Steadiness does not make headlines, but it makes a difference.

Top 3 Questions I’m Carrying Into 2026:

  • What do we need to stop doing so we can focus on what truly matters?
  • How do we prepare students for an AI-shaped future without losing our humanity?
  • What does leadership look like when certainty is no longer available?

As I wrote in my June post on the power of questions (here), I’m increasingly convinced that progress in education doesn’t come from having better answers, but from asking better questions. These three will quietly shape my thinking, decisions, and conversations as I step into 2026.

Top 3 Things I Was Wrong About:

  • I thought ethical discussions on AI would be more mainstream by now
  • I never thought Canada would come down with Blue Jays fever
  • I did not see my own writing renaissance coming

On AI ethics, I expected 2025 to be the year we would see more public conversation about the big questions. What does this mean for work? For creativity? For what it means to be human? Those conversations are happening, but not at the scale I anticipated. Maybe 2026.

The Blue Jays World Series excitement this year caught me completely off guard. I wrote about it, and it connected with people in ways I did not expect. There is something about baseball that still captures the imagination.

And the writing renaissance? I genuinely did not see it coming. After nearly 500 posts, I thought the well might be running dry. Instead, this year I found more to say than ever. I needed to write. That was a gift.

Top 3 Things I Am Getting Worse At As I Age:

  • Public speaking
  • Seeing stuff
  • Connecting with new staff

This is a new category, and I think an important one. Humility matters.

Public speaking used to feel effortless. Now I feel the rust. I am not as smooth as I was 20 years ago, and I notice it.  I am conscious now that I am not as good as I once was.  My glasses have become a constant companion, though I am still fighting that battle.  Far too often I am using my phone to take a photo of text to enlarge and read.   And connecting with new teachers who are younger than my own children? I can feel my age in those conversations sometimes. It takes more intentionality than it used to. Speaking and connecting are definitely two areas I can work on in 2026.

Top 3 AI Tools for Education (The Migration to the Big Players):

  • ChatGPT
  • Claude
  • Gemini and CoPilot (tied for third)

Last year I wrote about niche AI tools. This year I find myself using fewer specialized tools and relying more on the big players. Co-Pilot, Claude, Gemini, and ChatGPT have become my core toolkit. They are more powerful, more integrated, and constantly improving. The niche tools still have their place, but the migration to the majors has been real for me this year.

Top 3 Presentations That Pushed My Thinking:

  • Speaking to teachers in Beijing
  • Sharing AI thinking with Safe Schools Coordinators
  • Let’s Talk Science

The Beijing presentation stays with me. Their issues are our issues. The questions teachers ask in China about AI, about engagement, about preparing students for an uncertain future are the same questions we wrestle with here. It was a powerful reminder that education’s challenges are global.

Safe Schools Coordinators pushed me to see AI from a different perspective. When you talk about AI with people focused on safety, you think differently about risks and responsibilities.

And my Let’s Talk Science presentation late in the year forced me to take stock of where West Vancouver is right now. Sometimes you need an external audience to clarify your own thinking.

Top 3 Authors Who Pushed My Thinking in 2025:

  • Yong Zhao
  • Peter Diamandis
  • Adam Grant 

Yong Zhao continues to challenge my assumptions about what education could be. I got a look at a new book (here) he has coming out in 2026, and he is pushing again!  Peter Diamandis (here) got me thinking about longevity, which connects to so much of how I approach my own health and habits. And Adam Grant? He pushes my thinking (here) even when I push back. That is what good authors do.

Top 3 AI Connections I Always Recommend:

If you want to follow smart people thinking carefully about AI in education, start with these four. They are generous with their ideas and always worth reading.

Top 3 Blogs I Never Miss (Even After All These Years):

The edu blogosphere is not what it was in 2011 to 2014, but these passionate educators keep writing, and I keep reading. There is something to be said for people who have been at this for years and still find things worth saying. They inspire me to keep going. 

Top 3 Concerts I Saw This Year:

  • Paul Simon (multiple locations)
  • Andy Grammer
  • AC/DC

Paul Simon is not really retired yet, and I am grateful for every chance to see him. I have written about what his music means to me, and those concerts remain a highlight of any year. Andy Grammer brought pure joy. And AC/DC? Sometimes you just need to rock.

Top 3 Travel Moments of the Year:

  • 25th Wedding Anniversary at Niagara Falls
  • Running the 45th Anniversary Terry Fox Run on Confederation Bridge with my two sons
  • The VK Basketball Summer Circuit (Phoenix, LA, Montreal, Las Vegas, Chicago)

Yes, Niagara Falls for a 25th anniversary is a cliché. I do not care. It was great.

The Terry Fox Run from New Brunswick to PEI with 10,000 people on the Confederation Bridge with my sons will stay with me forever. There is something about running alongside your children for a cause that matters that defies easy description.

And the VK Basketball Circuit hit year 10 this summer. Phoenix, LA, Montreal, Las Vegas, Chicago. One more summer left with a playing age daughter. I am not taking it for granted. For the last 10 years I have spent my summers with amazing young athletes and coaches who are some of my very best friends.  It is so much fun!

Top 3 Social Media Follows That Keep Me Focused:

These three help me stay disciplined. Discipline is key. In a world of endless distraction, I need voices that remind me to do the work.

Top 3 Things I Tried To Do More Of This Year:

  • Say no to stuff that was not something I was passionate about
  • Say yes to AI and athletics, two areas where I think I can really add value
  • Be a better mentor and reach out more to colleagues I think I can assist

Saying no is hard for someone who writes a blog called Culture of Yes. But saying no to the wrong things creates space to say yes to the right ones. I need to still cull some things I do from my professional life that are time and energy drags and add little value.   AI and athletics are where I can contribute most right now. And mentorship? I want to be for others what my mentors were for me.

Top 3 Daily Streaks I Still Have Going:

  • Running 5 outdoor km a day (just passed 1,800 days, looking forward to 2,000 on July 9, 2026)
  • 10,000 steps a day (now at 12 years)
  • Daily photo posting to Instagram (January 1st will be 10 years)

The streaks continue. They are about discipline and consistency, qualities I believe are in short supply and more important than ever. The running streak crossing 1,800 days feels significant. 2,000 is on the horizon.

Top 3 Artists for Me According to Spotify This Year:

  • Paul Simon
  • Simon and Garfunkel
  • The Beatles

Not much to see here. For all the things that change in the world, my music tastes are not one of them. I am still my parents’ musical loves.  Spotify gives you an age based on my music – I came in at 73 years old.

Top 3 Photos From This Past Year That Make Me Smile:

With Nick and Zack on the Confederation Bridge

Paul Simon at the Massey Hall in Toronto

Learning alongside K students at West Bay Elementary School

I could easily pick so many others. I love going through my photos from each day to look back on the year. A collection of work, family, and friends. Scrolling through them will always make me smile.

Final Thoughts

As I wrap up my reflections on 2025, I keep coming back to the word that has guided this blog from the beginning: yes.

Yes to curiosity. Yes to optimism. Yes to the belief that education can be better and that the people in it are working hard to make it so.

This year brought me a writing renaissance I did not expect. It reminded me that even after 30 years in education, there is still so much to learn, so much to say, and so much to be excited about.

Early in the new year, I will hit a milestone: 500 posts on Culture of Yes. I did not know when I started this blog that it would become such a constant in my life. But here we are, and I am grateful.

To all of you who have read, shared, and engaged with these posts throughout the year: thank you. Your reflections, challenges, and encouragement fuel my writing and inspire my thinking.

Here is to stepping into 2026 with the same energy, passion, and hope that have carried us through this year. Here is to staying curious as I finish my 30th year in education.

Happy holidays, and see you in the new year.

The image at the top of this post was generated through AI.  Various AI tools were used as feedback helpers (for our students this post would be a Yellow assignment – see link to explanation chart) as I edited and refined my thinking.

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My “Top 3” List for 2024

Here we are – a final post for year 15 on Culture of yes.

As another year comes to a close, I find myself looking back at 2024 and all the moments that made it memorable. It’s become a tradition for me to reflect on the year and put together a “Top 3” list—just a quick way to highlight the ideas, experiences, and surprises that stood out the most. 

If you are wondering what you might have missed, here are the previous years Top 3 lists:  2023 (here) 2022 (here) 2021 (here) 2020 (here) 2019 (here) 2018 (here) 2017 (here) 2016 (here) 2015 (here) 2014 (here) 2013 (here) 2012 (here), 2011 (here) and 2010 (here)

This isn’t about covering everything or being overly formal; it’s more like sharing a few of my favorite highlights from the year. So, grab a Booster Juice or settle in to a White Spot Pirate Pak and join me as I look back on what made 2024 special.  

Top 3 “Culture of Yes” Blog Posts which have generated the most traffic this year:

  1.  28 Reasons to Love Teaching from a 28 Year Veteran
  2. Thinking About the Anxious Generation
  3. Taylor Swift’s Masterclass:  Lessons in Leadership for Schools

Taylor Swift’s popularity is everywhere.  If I take a look at this year’s most read posts in a couple of months, the recent post about her will probably be number one. It is just much newer than the others ahead of it.  The 28 Reasons post was probably my favourite post to write, so nice to see it connect so well with people.  How people find this blog continues to be interesting.  For many years Twitter drove much of the traffic, now LinkedIn is a far more common place for people to find it.  And then certain posts, like when I write about parenting or sports, or Taylor Swift, are well shared through Facebook.  Overall the metrics show readership up about 25% year-over-year and numbers are the highest they have been in about a decade.  Still not at the numbers of 2011 – 2014 (the glory days of the edu blogosphere) but great to see that I can still connect with such a strong network.  Interestingly, the least read post this year was The Art of Staying Relevant.

Top 3 Shifts in BC Education in 2024:

  1. Limiting Phones in Schools 
  2. The growth of AI 
  3. Focus on literacy and numeracy

Looking more broadly, like many jurisdictions across North America, British Columbia put in rules to limit the use of technology, and in particular cellphones, during school time.  A couple takeaways from this change for me, 1) It went over very well with not a lot of challenges.  Students quickly adapting to new procedures, and the limits were flexible enough to recognize different rules for different ages and circumstances is important and 2) The fear of some that these changes would push back the thoughtful use of technology in schools did not come to fruition.  Students and staff are still using technology as appropriate, but are in most cases being more intentional.

I have covered AI a lot, including a full post (HERE), just last week.  BC has had a big advantage because of forward thinking work from the Ministry of Education.  The resources are available HERE.

And the refocusing on core learning skills of numeracy and literacy is an important focus, again in BC and beyond.  In part as a result of dipping results in international assessments, in part because of a sense that COVID had a negative impact in these areas, and a reevaluation of the topics that have dominated education conversations, these key areas are being given additional attention.

Top 3 Things I was Wrong About:

  1. Cell phones
  2. In-person meetings 
  3. AI resistance

Always good to think about areas where you have changed your thinking. And sometimes you just have a hunch that proves to be wrong. 

When it comes to cell phones, as I noted above, I expected the limitations on students to be met with more resistance from students (and also parents trying to get ahold of their children).  What happened was it really went smoothly.  Students knowing that other students also didn’t have access during class time seemed to have a positive impact for everyone.  And the flexibility (at least with the rules in BC) to allow technology still for purposeful class use meant digital efforts continued to move forward. 

I finally relented and moved a series of our administrator meetings back to in-person.  I had been a hold out thinking they should continue online. I liked the idea of our staff not having to travel from their schools – the chance to save travel time and also lessen time out of buildings seemed like a win.  What I was missing was that these meetings were an important connection point for people, and the informal meetings that often occur at these sessions are actually crucial.  

And I was sure parents were going to want AI banned in schools.  Not that it is possible, I was just expecting a repeat of the social media conversation from 15 years ago.  It has been completely different.  I think parents see that AI is changing their lives and actually they are often looking to the schools to upskill themselves.  I think our parent education sessions on AI are so well attended in part because parents know they need these skills for themselves.

Top 3 AI Tools for education I have used (not counting ChatGPT):

  1. Brisk
  2. Magic School
  3. Claude

OK, full disclosure.  I had a very similar category last year, and I am using none of the tools now that I wrote about then.  This speaks to the fluidity in the space and how quickly things are moving and new AI tools are emerging.  I am also not calling these free tools, as although they all have free versions, they also have paid versions.  It is dangerous to get hooked on the free version of any of these products, and often features might start as free and move to the paid version or vice versa.  In looking at these 3 tools, I like Brisk particularly for secondary schools and for its integration with Google.  It is really easy to get started with for teachers.  Magic School is our core AI tool in West Vancouver, and it has a simple interface and I like it particularly for younger students as you can turn off and on specific parts of it.  And Claude is one I use more and more with writing.  It is  a competitor to Chat GPT and I find they offer a good contrast when looking for feedback.  I often use them in tandem with my writing.  Before publishing this post, both Claude and Chat GPT were used to get feedback.  

Top 3  TED Talks I watched this year that pushed my thinking:

  1.  What is AI Anyway?

2. How the US is Destroying Young People’s Future

3.  Sport Leadership:  Are We Lost?

Top 3 artists for me according to Spotify this year:

  1.  Paul Simon
  2.  Simon and Garfunkel
  3.  The Beatles

Not much to see here – other than for all the things that change in the world, my music tastes are not one of them.  The Beatles snuck in the bronze medal spot this year over James Taylor.  I am still my parents musical tastes.  

Top 3 Concerts I Saw This Year:

  1. Taylor Swift
  2. Bruce Springsteen
  3. Pearl Jam

OK, so my concert list is a little more modern than my regular musical listens (Of course I would trade all the concerts I see in any given year for one more Simon and Garfunkel reunion concert).  I have already referenced the Taylor Swift concert earlier as it led to one of my most read posts.  It was also a particularly nice event for me as I was treated to the ticket by my older daughter who was lucky to get some of the last minute tickets that were released.  Another artist who went for more than 3 hours, Bruce Springsteen, put on an amazing show.  And Pearl Jam was on my concert bucket-list and it was great to see them in-person.  I am always so impressed with how Springsteen and Pearl Jam make every show different.  

Top daily 3 streaks I still have going:

  1. 10,000 Steps
  2. Running 5 km a day
  3. Photo posting to Instagram

Yup – I can just cut and past my top 3 here from last year, and many years now.  It will be a bigger deal when any of these come to an end.  These streaks are all about discipline and consistency, qualities that I think are so important, and often in short supply today.  The steps streak in now at every day for 11 years.  I wrote about the running streak HERE when I crossed the 1000 day mark in October 2023, the streak is now over 1400 days, and I continue to post a photo every day – something that will hit 10 years or just over 3650 days of posting. photos on January 1st.  

Top  3 photos from this past year that make me smile:

A great West Vancouver leadership team tradition - Adult Pirate Pak Day!

A great West Vancouver leadership team tradition – Adult Pirate Pak Day!

I can vividly remember the story this young learner was telling me with his loose parts he was using.

One of many fun family traditions – strawberry picking day on Father’s Day Weekend.

I could have easily picked so many other photos.  I love going through my photos from each day to look back on the year – a great collection of work, family and friends.  I stopped making them public a few years ago, but I still post them to Instagram and archive them.  Scrolling through them will always make me smile.  

Final Thoughts

As I wrap up my reflections on 2024, I am once again struck by the power of traditions, both big and small, to anchor us through the whirlwind of change. This blog, my streaks, the music, the moments with family and colleagues—they remind me that even in a world reshaped by technology and shifting priorities, the things that truly matter remain steady.

This year has been one of growth and learning, filled with new challenges and exciting opportunities. Whether through conversations about AI, embracing the evolving landscape of education, or simply finding joy in a Pirate Pak, I’m reminded of the importance of staying curious, connected, and optimistic about what’s ahead.

To all of you who’ve read, shared, and engaged with these posts throughout the year—thank you. Your reflections, challenges, and encouragement fuel my writing and inspire my thinking. Here’s to stepping into 2025 with the same energy, passion, and hope that have carried us through this transformative year.

Happy holidays, and see you in the new year!

The image at the top of this post was created using Chat GPT.  I also used Chat GPT and Claude in my review and editing process for this post.

 

 

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