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Dire-Wolf Pups

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Dire-Wolf Pups

Dire wolves, made famous by “Game of Thrones,” went extinct some 13,000 years ago. Now, reports The Times, researchers have bred gray-wolf pups that carry genes of their ancient cousins.

Use your imagination to write the opening of a short story or poem inspired by this news or the image of the puppies — or describe a memory from your own life that this image makes you think of.

Post your work in the comments, and then read the related article to learn more.


Students 13 and older in the United States and Britain, and 16 and older elsewhere, are invited to comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff, but please keep in mind that once your comment is accepted, it will be made public and may appear in print.

Find more Picture Prompts here.

Word of the Day: stylus

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Word of the Day: stylus

The word stylus has appeared in eight articles on NYTimes.com in the past year, including on Feb. 24 in “100 Years Ago Recording Studios Got a New Tool: Microphones” by Ludovic Hunter-Tilney:

Thomas Edison invented the phonograph in 1877, and the period until 1925 is known as the acoustical era. A conical recording horn would capture the music being performed; sound waves caused a stylus to cut grooves into a rotating wax disc, marking it with audio information.

Can you correctly use the word stylus in a sentence?

Based on the definition and example provided, write a sentence using today’s Word of the Day and share it as a comment on this article. It is most important that your sentence makes sense and demonstrates that you understand the word’s definition, but we also encourage you to be creative and have fun.

If you want a better idea of how stylus can be used in a sentence, read these usage examples on Vocabulary.com. You can also visit this guide to learn how to use IPA symbols to show how different words are pronounced.

If you enjoy this daily challenge, try our vocabulary quizzes.


Students ages 13 and older in the United States and the United Kingdom, and 16 and older elsewhere, can comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff.

The Word of the Day is provided by Vocabulary.com. Learn more and see usage examples across a range of subjects in the Vocabulary.com Dictionary. See every Word of the Day in this column.

Discover the Latest Trends in 2025: Newest Developments

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Discover the Latest Trends in 2025: Newest Developments
  • The learner has the skill or skills; if they lack them, they can take content to skill up (however, the latter doesn’t appear in every system, as it relates to “content.”
  • Learner’s skills match an opportunity (some vendors list a percentage by it or identify the strengths of specific skills)
  • The learner sees the opportunities (some vendors list all the opportunities, even if the learner doesn’t have the skill set(s) for them)
  • Learner applies for that opportunity.
  • Manager reviews the opportunity (This I find is weird because often it is the current manager, not the hiring person. In the current manager reviews the opportunity item, they either accept or deny)
  • Assumption opportunity is a go – it goes to the hiring manager (For those systems that do not require the current manager to accept or deny)
  • The hiring manager or whomever either accepts the learner to go to the next step or denies it (often, the learner does not see the results. Rather, it is offline)
  • The approach angles not to those higher up, seeking opportunities that may align to them, say, director, senior director, VP, and so forth (I haven’t seen this in any of the opportunities, although I assume there has to be at least one system that offers it)
  • Some systems use AI in this aspect, ignoring fake or fake information and AI bias – an issue. Equally, some states require specific approaches – i.e., applying for a job, even if it is internal. There are vendors unaware.
  • Learner’s percentage of skill knowledge – Manager reviews the skill and validates or not (the latter is common, but the rate isn’t)
  • The assumption automatically that the learner’s skills or skill is 100% accurate – If I am a manager with 50 people or more under me, am I going to know the skill proficiency of my employees, especially if they are in various job roles on topics I am unfamiliar with?)
  • Content recommendation to boost that skill (I have seen this part, but again, even if listed, it doesn’t state the recommendation percentage, and more than standard, it becomes an assigned piece, which shouldn’t be the case. We are talking about learning and training, not you are a robot and here is a widget, so learn it – without any insight into what you already know parts of the widget)
  • Interests are often ignored even though systems have them – not all; it isn’t common.
  • There is never a skill for empathy, yet in a study I did with CEOs, the most common requirement they sought was empathy.
  • A pre-assumption that if someone is perfect for that opportunity, they will either get that opportunity or go to the next step.

Celebrating 1 million global learners of content and credentials from Microsoft

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Celebrating 1 million global learners of content and credentials from Microsoft

By Marni Baker Stein, Chief Content Officer, Coursera 

Today, we are proud to announce that more than 1 million learners have enrolled in courses, Specializations, projects, and Professional Certificates from Microsoft, an industry partner since 2021. Microsoft learners span 195+ countries, with India, the U.S., Canada, Pakistan, and the U.K. rounding out the top five.

Since partnering with us in April 2021, Microsoft has launched 23 Professional Certificates and 14 Specializations (encompassing 170+ courses) as well as 15 standalone courses and two Guided Projects – all in job-relevant topics ranging from cybersecurity and UX design to data analysis and AI. In November, we expanded our partnership with Microsoft with the first Professional Certificates from Xbox on Coursera: Xbox Product Manager and Xbox Graphic Designer.

“When we partnered with Coursera nearly four years ago, our goal was to help ensure everyone has the ability to learn the most in-demand Microsoft cloud and AI skills – including how to use Microsoft technology to augment their careers,”  said Geoff Hirsch, Head of Training Services Partner Channel, Microsoft. “I’m thrilled that we’ve inspired more than 1 million learners to enroll in our content and realize their potential.”

Learners have been particularly interested in learning how to use specific Microsoft tools in their day-to-day work. These are the top five Microsoft courses of all time on Coursera:

We are honored to work with such a dedicated partner like Microsoft, who shares our commitment to expanding access to world-class content and credentials. As we mark this incredible milestone of 1 million learners, we look forward to delivering even more courses and certificates that help learners everywhere succeed in an evolving labor market. 

Learners can find all of Microsoft’s content on Coursera here

Weekly Student News Quiz: Global Markets, N.C.A.A. Finals, a Tortoise

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Weekly Student News Quiz: Global Markets, N.C.A.A. Finals, a Tortoise

Above is an image related to one of the news stories we followed this past week. Do you know what it shows? At the bottom of this quiz, you’ll find the answer.

Have you been paying attention to current events recently? See how many of these 10 questions you can get right.

What Would You Like to Make?

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What Would You Like to Make?

What do you enjoy making by hand? Do you bake, embroider or draw? Create with wood, beads, leather, paper, yarn or metal?

When was the last time you made something, just for the fun of it?

For inspiration, take a look at a Times series called Art of Craft, which takes you inside the work spaces of specialists whose work rises to the level of art.

In the series so far, you can find people who blacksmith, blow glass, and sculpt nails, who make balloon art, piñatas, surfboards, lampshades, tissue paper banners, beadwork, tiny sculptures, cakes, guitars, violins, saddles, quilts, jewelry, embroidery and baskets.

For example, Mei Kawajiri, shown in the video at the top of this post, hand-paints and sculpts custom-designed nails. When she first came to New York City from Japan she was alone and spoke no English, and would walk miles with a portfolio of her designs looking for work. (In fact, she created 3-D croissant nails because she struggled to pronounce the word, and it was easier to just point at her nails when ordering at a cafe!)

Now, however, her nails are in great demand:

For at least a few days most weeks, Mei Kawajiri makes hotel calls to celebrities like Cardi B, Heidi Klum, Ariana Grande and Bad Bunny to whip up viral creations, often shared with her more than 343,000 Instagram followers. Her medium might be even more impressive: extravagant nail art — minutely detailed 3-D pastries, hand-drawn portraits of anime heroines and six-inch acrylics embedded with jewels and bits of lace.

Or, get to know the work of Leleo Kinimaka, who grew up in Hawaii and has carved out a career as a woodworker.

His creations — primarily the intricately designed surfboards known as alaia boards, which have been used by islanders to catch waves for centuries — both reflect his upbringing and celebrate his culture:

“When I make boards incorporating Hawaiian symbols and stories, that’s my absolute favorite,” Kinimaka said, admiring his handiwork. Running his fingers along the surface, he added: “See this curly golden grain here? That represents the god of the sea, Kanaloa. These triangles? They represent shark teeth, a symbol of power. The three diamonds intersecting here? That represents ohana — family.”

Here, you can watch him at work:

Or, read about Roberto Benavidez, who works with a traditional Mexican craft that much of the art world has been slow to recognize as anything but a children’s toy:

The piñata, because it’s made out of humble paper and designed to be obliterated, is not always thought of as art. The Los Angeles-based artist Roberto Benavidez has worked to change that.

“It is just this innocuous kids’ party game to many,” Benavidez said. “The piñata is so much more.”

Benavidez has transformed the traditional piñata into something much more elaborate, emulating birds and mythical creatures straight out of medieval artworks and texts. Inside his studio, there lives a menagerie of creations: A silver giraffe stands watch over a half-dozen exuberantly colored birds hanging from the ceiling. At his desk, Benavidez was busy working on a new addition to the flock: a blue Kingfisher.

Students, scroll through the Art of Craft series, read one or more articles in full, and then tell us:

  • Which of these stories or crafts interests you most? Why? What is impressive to you about it?

  • What do you make that brings you joy or satisfaction? If you don’t currently make anything, can you remember a time when you did? What do you get from crafting things with your hands that you may not get from other activities?

  • Is there a craft that you wish you could focus on so deeply that, like these specialists, your work could rise to the level of art?

  • What crafting traditions are there in your family? For example, maybe you have a grandparent or aunt or uncle who made furniture or wove blankets or was a metalworker. Is there anyone in your extended family who could teach you a craft of some kind?

  • What crafting traditions are a part of your ethnic, regional or religious heritage? What do you think those crafts can tell you about the culture that brought them about?

  • What, if anything, do you think is the difference between work that is considered “art” and work that is considered “craft”? Many of these articles allude to a line between the two. For example, in the story about the Indigenous beadworker Teri Greeves, we learn that even “as her own work is now in the collections of museums such as the Heard Museum in Phoenix, the Brooklyn Museum and the National Museum of the American Indian, Greeves identifies as her grandmother did: as a beadworker, not as an artist.” What, to you, separates art and craft? Why?

  • “Nails are such a powerful form of expression,” Kawajiri says — yet, like piñatas or beads or balloons, nails are not often thought of as art. What objects do you encounter every day — whether at home, in school, on the street, in stores or in terms of fashion — that strike you as a “powerful form of expression” that more people should notice and celebrate? What makes them interesting to you?


Students 13 and older in the United States and Britain, and 16 and older elsewhere, are invited to comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff, but please keep in mind that once your comment is accepted, it will be made public and may appear in print.

Find more Student Opinion questions here. Teachers, check out this guide to learn how you can incorporate these prompts into your classroom.

Theme Park

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Theme Park

Do you love theme parks? Which are your favorites? Why?

Do you know about Epic Universe, the new $7 billion theme park in Orlando that opens next month? Which of its four areas would you most want to visit? (One is based on “How to Train Your Dragon,” another on Super Nintendo video games, a third on the Harry Potter stories, and a fourth, called “Dark World,” on classic movie monsters.)

In general, what would you hope a new state-of-the-art theme park might offer in 2025 that older parks don’t? Why?

Tell us in the comments, and then read the related article to learn more about the park and what it will offer.


Students 13 and older in the United States and Britain, and 16 and older elsewhere, are invited to comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff, but please keep in mind that once your comment is accepted, it will be made public and may appear in print.

Find more Picture Prompts here.

Word of the Day: artisanal

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Word of the Day: artisanal

The word artisanal has appeared in 102 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year, including on Oct. 28 in “That’s a Lot of Cheddar: Scammers Steal $390,000 of British Cheese” by Amelia Nierenberg:

It’s been called “the grate cheese robbery.”

But it’s no joke to the tight-knit world of artisanal British cheese makers, which is reeling from the disappearance of 22 metric tons of rare Cheddar worth at least 300,000 pounds, about $390,000, in what appears to be the biggest con to hit their industry in decades.

Can you correctly use the word artisanal in a sentence?

Based on the definition and example provided, write a sentence using today’s Word of the Day and share it as a comment on this article. It is most important that your sentence makes sense and demonstrates that you understand the word’s definition, but we also encourage you to be creative and have fun.

If you want a better idea of how artisanal can be used in a sentence, read these usage examples on Vocabulary.com. You can also visit this guide to learn how to use IPA symbols to show how different words are pronounced.

If you enjoy this daily challenge, try our vocabulary quizzes.


Students ages 13 and older in the United States and the United Kingdom, and 16 and older elsewhere, can comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff.

The Word of the Day is provided by Vocabulary.com. Learn more and see usage examples across a range of subjects in the Vocabulary.com Dictionary. See every Word of the Day in this column.

Latest Trends First Quarter 2025 – Learning Systems

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Latest Trends First Quarter 2025 – Learning Systems
  • The learner has the skill or skills; if they lack them, they can take content to skill up (however, the latter doesn’t appear in every system, as it relates to “content.”
  • Learner’s skills match an opportunity (some vendors list a percentage by it or identify the strengths of specific skills)
  • The learner sees the opportunities (some vendors list all the opportunities, even if the learner doesn’t have the skill set(s) for them)
  • Learner applies for that opportunity.
  • Manager reviews the opportunity (This I find is weird because often it is the current manager, not the hiring person. In the current manager reviews the opportunity item, they either accept or deny)
  • Assumption opportunity is a go – it goes to the hiring manager (For those systems that do not require the current manager to accept or deny)
  • The hiring manager or whomever either accepts the learner to go to the next step or denies it (often, the learner does not see the results. Rather, it is offline)
  • The approach angles not to those higher up, seeking opportunities that may align to them, say, director, senior director, VP, and so forth (I haven’t seen this in any of the opportunities, although I assume there has to be at least one system that offers it)
  • Some systems use AI in this aspect, ignoring fake or fake information and AI bias – an issue. Equally, some states require specific approaches – i.e., applying for a job, even if it is internal. There are vendors unaware.
  • Learner’s percentage of skill knowledge – Manager reviews the skill and validates or not (the latter is common, but the rate isn’t)
  • The assumption automatically that the learner’s skills or skill is 100% accurate – If I am a manager with 50 people or more under me, am I going to know the skill proficiency of my employees, especially if they are in various job roles on topics I am unfamiliar with?)
  • Content recommendation to boost that skill (I have seen this part, but again, even if listed, it doesn’t state the recommendation percentage, and more than standard, it becomes an assigned piece, which shouldn’t be the case. We are talking about learning and training, not you are a robot and here is a widget, so learn it – without any insight into what you already know parts of the widget)
  • Interests are often ignored even though systems have them – not all; it isn’t common.
  • There is never a skill for empathy, yet in a study I did with CEOs, the most common requirement they sought was empathy.
  • A pre-assumption that if someone is perfect for that opportunity, they will either get that opportunity or go to the next step.

Test Yourself on the History of How Books Were Made

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Test Yourself on the History of How Books Were Made

Welcome to Lit Trivia, the Book Review’s regular quiz about literary culture. This week’s installment tests your knowledge of the global evolution of books themselves. In the five multiple-choice questions below, tap or click on the answer you think is correct. After the last question, you’ll find links to further reading on the topic.