This system has helped hundreds of traders and newbies make money online on autopilot...

Category: Bookshop

Stage 1 Identify Desired Results

Slide One: In this mini lecture, we will be discussing stage 1 in the Understanding by Design model of instructional design. Slide Two: As a quick refresher of what you have already learned, backward design has three stages: first you identify your learning outcomes (the subject of this video), then you determine evidence of learning (assessments), and finally you plan the curriculum and instruction Slide Three: In sum, backward design centers the ultimate learning goals the North Star.

By following the North Star, students expand their knowledge and skillset for success in and outside the classroom. Skills and knowledge must extend beyond the classroom (or semester) for true growth and learning.

Backward design enables learners to transfer what they have learned to other contexts. Slide four: Remember- we are designing backward, so we are going to start with the ultimate learning goals and objectives for the course. Basically, you want to ask the following three questions, which build from lowest to highest priority or from the smallest to biggest picture: What should students hear, see, or read? What knowledge and skills should students demonstrate? What big ideas and core understandings should students retain? These big ideas are called essential questions in Understanding by Design, and they are what I am calling your North Star.

Slide five: Step one: What type of knowledge is low-to-medium priority for learners?

You will always have some content that it of the lowest priority to be mentioned in lectures, units, or modules?

Think about what these are because, if need be, they can be moved around, maybe you will find they could be eliminated entirely to focus more on the essential questions.

Slide six: Step two: expanding our scope, the knowledge and skills that students demonstrate are medium-to-high priority items. These can include facts, dates, people, concepts, theories, principles, equations, or whatever else is important in your discipline.

Slide seven Finally, what about our big ideas (your North Star or essential questions) that engender enduring understanding?

These are the core ideas that professors want their students to remember after the course is done.

These are the highest-priority learning items.

Slide Eight Let s take a little deep dive: What are essential questions Understanding by Design emphasizes essential questions and core understandings. The essential questions and core understandings are the so what part of learning- the North Star that you guide your students toward throughout the course.

To determine your North Star, ask yourself: What do I want my students to carry with them beyond the class?

By using essential questions and core understandings you can be intentional in your pedagogy, academically rigorous (because you know the purpose of everything and what is high, medium, or low priority and what mastery or proficiency looks like) and connect assessments and learning activities to your over-arching goals and objectives.

Essential questions are provocative, challenging, big picture questions that you want your learners to engage with.

They do not have a simple yes or no answer, they require learners to use evidence and/or logic to answer and require learners to use higher-level skills (like analysis or application as opposed to memorization or recall alone).

They often occur over and over (across settings and academic disciplines) and can be used to make connections inside and outside the course.
This extension beyond the course is often called transfer or your transfer goals in backward design.

Think of it this way: what core understandings, skills, or ideas will your learners be able to apply in future courses, in other educational settings, or the real world? By building transfer goals into your course, you ensure that learners leave with knowledge and skills that are transferable to multiple contexts.

Slide Nine: By developing courses around core understandings and essential questions, professors answer the element of learning that perplexes many students in a traditional, forward designed course: Why are we doing this, again? Slide

Ten: So, you might be asking: What are essential questions or core understandings?

Here are some examples. Examples of essential questions might include: Why should we engage with the big ideas that philosophers, historians, chemists, social scientists (insert your subject here) have debated for centuries? What is their value? How can we create a multicultural democracy? How do people learn?

What does it mean to live a good life? Examples of core understandings might include Students will understand why reading comprehension is foundational for other high-level tasks like critical thinking or academic writing.

Students will trace (insert your discipline here) thinking on (major idea in your field or subject) from (date-to-date).

Students will describe the research process and how to collect and analyze data.

Slide 11: Generally, a course will have only a select few core understandings and essential questions this is what makes them your North Star.

Once you have determined the essential questions and over-arching learning goals, you can create more specific learning objectives for each week, module or unit. Hopefully this lecture was helpful in clarifying step one of backwards design and the importance of essential questions and core understandings in your class. See you in the course!

https://safe-list.com/paidlinks/index.php?refid=carlybaners44

Commission Upgrade
https://warriorplus.com/o2/a/xjt0kq/0

[table id=1 /]

33 Life-Changing Books Summarized in 20 Minutes

I’ve read over 1,000 non-fiction books in my life, and these 33 are the most powerful life-changing of them all, and they’re all summarized in less than one minute each. So let’s fucking go! This might be the most practical book ever written on simple behavioral change. “Atomic Habits” has three big takeaways. The first is that small lifestyle changes, compound over a long period of time.

So you don’t wanna try to be a completely different person tomorrow, you wanna be 1% better 100 days in a row. The second big takeaway can be summarized with the line, “We don’t rise to the level of our goals, but we fall to the level of our systems.” The idea here is that it’s not about ambition or effort, it’s about creating an environment that makes behavioral change inevitable. And finally, the third takeaway is that habits don’t stick unless we alter our identities.

That means it’s not sufficient to simply change our behavior, but we also have to change how we see ourselves and how we relate to others.”The Expectation Effect” by David Robson. Science shows our expectations can drastically affect how we perceive reality. People who believe they’re capable of doing something are far more likely to do it. People who believe they will heal from an injury or illness do so quicker and more consistently. People who expect medication or therapy to work have a greater chance of that medication or therapy working.

Basically, the mind is a really fucking powerful thing and it affects our bodies and relationships in ways that we don’t fully understand. So you might as well adopt mindsets and beliefs that are most likely to help you. That’s leveraging the expectation effect. What if I told you that stress isn’t always a bad thing, that it could even be a good thing? Well, that’s the argument that Kelly McGonigal makes in this important book.

Stress has a bad reputation. We’re told, “It will kill us, it will traumatize us, it will make us miserable and sad and cry into our ice cream cone.” Well, it depends specifically on what exactly is stressing us.

Is it a meaningful and important challenge that is stressful? Is the stress creating value for you in the world?
After all, stress exists for a reason. It mobilizes us, both physically and mentally. It gets us paying attention, and when directed in a meaningful pursuit, it can help us feel a sense of accomplishment. – [All] Goal! – So you shouldn’t necessarily avoid stress, you should pick the stress that you’re happy to have.

Conventional wisdom tells us to follow our passion. Pick a job you love, and you’ll never work a day in your life, right? “Wrong,” says Cal Newport. The research says that, “We get it backwards.” We don’t do great work at things we love, we tend to love things that we become very good at.

So instead of trying to follow your passion all the time, which let’s be honest, it’s a wishy-washy concept that many people struggle to even define, Newport argues that we should instead be focusing on developing our skills, because you can become passionate about anything, you just need to be good at it first. Did you know this was Steve Jobs favorite book? “The Innovator’s Dilemma” is a phenomenon that occurs in business when the biggest and most successful companies, miss the most obvious opportunities because they’re so invested in older technologies, they can’t justify moving on.

The perfect example of this is Kodak. Did you know that Kodak actually experimented with digital cameras back in 1975?

But they never pursued the technology because they had built up billions of dollars around analog film. 30 years later, Kodak went out of business, why? Digital cameras. “The Innovator’s Dilemma” shows up not only in business, but also in life. Generally, when we miss huge opportunities, it’s not because we weren’t looking for them or weren’t aware of them, it’s because we are benefiting so much from our old tendencies that we let the life-changing opportunity pass us by.

It turns out that the human mind has a number of triggers that cause us to be easily influenced by others and their ideas. Robert Cialdini boils these triggers down into eight categories, and in his seminal book, “Influence,” explains how they’re often used in sales and marketing, but also used by people around us to get what they want from you.

Drawing from examples from religious cults, professors and colleges, teachers, marketing experts and advertisements, this book will change how you see your own decision-making. It’s a must read for anyone interested in psychology, but especially, if you’re in sales and marketing. “4-Hour Workweek,” a book that changed a generation of entrepreneurs.

Ferriss’ big insight is in the nature of how one defines wealth. Instead of becoming wealthy by accumulating expensive possessions, Ferriss defines wealth in terms of freedom and time and the ability to have enriching experiences. With this new definition, the classic arrangement of working for 40 years and then retiring, doesn’t really make a lot of sense.

By leveraging technology, automation and working anywhere in the world, Ferriss describes how you can become part of the new rich or live a wealthy life at a young age on a modest amount of money. Get rich, bitch.

Dopamine is a neurotransmitter that allows us to feel a sense of reward or accomplishment. It’s crucial in motivation and feelings of life satisfaction, but like anything, too much dopamine could be a bad thing. In her book, “Dopamine Nation,” Anne Lembke makes the argument that modern society is overstimulating us and flooding our brains with more dopamine than we were meant to handle. The result is a glut of addictive, compulsive overindulgent behaviors, across the developed world. Basically, we’re all getting fat and sassy.

So how do we combat this? Through abstention intentional challenge and being more mindful of our environments, if you feel like your dopamine levels are through the fucking roof, which you’re on YouTube, so they probably are, then this book is probably useful. Ernest Becker was an obscure academic who wrote this book on his deathbed as he was dying of cancer. Bringing together influences from existential philosophy, Freudian psychology, and Zen Buddhism, Becker argued that death is life’s ultimate motivator, that what gives us a sense of meaning and purpose in our lives is an attempt to create something that will outlive us when we die.

Becker called these our immortality projects and argued that they were the root of not only everything good in our lives, but also everything evil.

Simple piece of science, massive implications. “The Paradox of Choice” tells us that, “When offered more options, we tend to be less satisfied with whatever we choose.” So if I offer you to choose between two candy bars, you’ll pick your favorite and be satisfied. But if I ask you to choose between 10 candy bars, you’ll have more options, but research finds, you’ll be less satisfied with whatever you choose.

In a world that is constantly unlocking more options and abundance for us all, this has wide implications from dating to career choices, to hobbies, to even choosing where to live.

Beware of the paradox of choice. This is a simple book that sums up the most fundamental mindset between people who get rich and people who stay poor. Poor people see money as something to be spent. They try to find and get as much as possible and then use it up until it’s gone. Rich people, on the other hand, see money as something to invest.
Once it’s spent, they look for a good return. This simple difference in mindset can explain all sorts of behavior from what kind of car people drive to, what kind of clothes they wear, to how much they save for retirement, how many credit cards they use. A small book that can be read in an afternoon, but a simple idea that should be internalized by everyone. Fun fact, this dude is broke. Viktor Frankl was an Austrian psychiatrist who was captured by the Nazis and sent to Auschwitz.

Spending the next three years in concentration camps, he somehow managed to survive. And while there, he made an observation, both simple and profound, that the prisoners who had a reason to survive the concentration camps, tended to be the ones who did. He said that, “He got to the point where he could predict which prisoner would die next based on which ones had stopped having hope for the future.” Frankl summed up his conclusion with Nietzsche’s famous maxim, “He who has a why to live can bear almost any how.” Victor’s incredible realization is that while suffering may often be inevitable, as long as we have some higher purpose to grant our suffering, meaning we can not only survive it but grow from it.

I’m not going to throw this one, feels inappropriate.”How to Win Friends & Influence People,” a self-help classic that teaches the completely counterintuitive truth that when you focus on other people, shocking, they will like you more. Unfortunately, our default approach to most relationships is to speak instead of listen, to try to feel seen instead of trying to see the other person.

Carnegie’s book is a simple yet profound explanation that the way to connect with others is to simply open yourself up to being connected with them, and then shut the fuck up and listen better. To be honest, I feel like this should be required reading for every high schooler in the world, but fuck, nobody asked me for these things.

They ask you how you are, you just have to say that you’re fine, and you’re not really fine. – “Start With Why” makes a simple but important point, when choosing what to pursue, start by asking why. That is, ask yourself, what are you optimizing for and what is the primary motivation or purpose? When we align our actions with some higher purpose, we become more motivated and more effective and more resilient to setbacks. This is particularly important within organizations.

Sinek argues that it’s ultimately our why that keeps everyone aligned and on the same page when shit goes South.

Are people mentally weaker than they used to be? Have we become more emotionally fragile? Well, the authors of this incredible book argue yes, and they back it up with a shitload of data. Unfortunately, it seems in the last 15 years, the public has become more emotionally fragile, and particularly, young people are less tolerant of any sort of discomfort or inconvenience that comes their way.

Now, the authors have a number of data-driven explanations for this.

The first one is the rise of helicopter parenting. The assumption that parents need to watch their kids and protect them at all costs. The second one is the philosophy of safetyism. The belief that anything that can cause pain or suffering is ultimately harmful in the long run and can even be traumatic.

The third explanation is lack of play. The past few generations of kids have been so overloaded with schoolwork and extracurricular activities trying to get into a good college that they haven’t had time to be kids, and it turns out that most mental and emotional development and children happens while they’re playing. And finally, there’s everybody’s favorite culprit, social media. I shouldn’t have to explain that one. ”

The Revolt of the Public.” Martin Gurri was an analyst at the CAA when he noticed something was wrong in 2011. It started with wide scale pro-democracy demonstrations in the Middle East, but soon, it spread the populist uprisings across the world with demonstrations in Europe and the Americas. The advent of social media and mobile phones, had made performative political activism possible in a way that had never existed previously.

Before, organizing a protest required a ton of resources, a giant network, marketing and publicity. But today, with the help of a smartphone and a viral post, ad hoc political protests could be started at the drop of a hat.

Now, these new performative protests were markedly different from previous ones. They were unorganized, and while they all advocated for the downfall of the current establishment, they didn’t really propose anything in its place. Gurri calls this new orientation, the periphery versus the center. It’s no longer about right versus left. It’s about establishment versus anti-establishment.

And unfortunately, we’re all caught in the middle. Do you winna throw that one? It’s a nice book. – It is a nice book. Well, we’ll let that one go.

Our parents, no matter how good and well-intentioned, fuck something up. They make mistakes, they have their own issues and quirks. These issues, quirks and mistakes, then imprint themselves on our brains as our love map. Basically, the way we unconsciously understand affection and intimacy. Then as adults, we unconsciously seek out partners that fit into our love maps, thus recreating the failures of mistakes made by our parents.

These failures and mistakes, re-trigger old psychological wounds and make our relationships incredibly emotionally turbulent. The way out of this mess is then to find a partner who is also aware of this process, and you can work together to change both of your behaviors, and essentially correct for the fuck ups made by each other’s parents. In this sense, the power of relationships is that they can literally heal your emotional wounds. This, in a nutshell, is the purpose of romantic love that bongo-bongo time. Do be will.

The most important truths about money are also the most counterintuitive.

This is why “The Psychology of Money,” by Morgan Housel is such an important book. Nobody spends their money rationally. We’re terrible at assessing risk. Financial security only exists if you have more, and being rich and being wealthier, complete contradictions of one another.

Do any of these things make sense, ¿no? Well, read the book and they fucking will. These are just a few of the mind-bending ideas that “The Psychology of Money,” will Un pretzel your brain for. The book is a fascinating ROM through all the fucked-up ways our minds mishandle money, both literally and figuratively. And the highest form of wealth is what you can’t measure.

You don’t winna own the Ferrari, you winna own the feeling of owning a Ferrari. It’s a must read for anyone who wants to get rich and or die trying. Are you one of those people who wishes that you sat down and read like 500 books but never actually did? Well, then you’ll appreciate this sponsor of this video.

Shortform is a book summary app that specializes in personal development and business books.

Now, I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking, “Mark, I can’t read book summaries, that’s cheating.” Well, I thought the same thing, but then I signed up for Shortform, and I was like, “Okay, shit, this is actually really useful.” I personally love using Shortform for a few different reasons. One is, sometimes I check Shortform first to see if the book is actually worth buying.

You get a nice summary of the ideas in the book, you quick breakdown of the major points, and if they’re good, and they seem interesting, then I go buy the book. Other times I love using Shortform simply for research. Like, if I know there’s a book that I really only wanna read like 10 pages of, but I don’t wanna buy the whole book, well, I can just pull up Shortform, find the relevant section. Shortform is great for refreshing your memory of books that you read years ago, but you kind of forgot what was in them.

And yeah, of course, if you winna pretend like you read 500 books without actually reading 500 books, you can do that too.
I won’t judge. Note, I will completely judge.

So, sign up with the link below, and you’ll get 20% off your first-year membership. And of course, if you hate it, you can cancel anytime. Now, enough about book summaries, let’s get back to book summaries.”Outlive,” by Peter Attia. If you’re watching this, it’s very likely you’re going to die of one of four things, heart disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s, or diabetes. Also, it just happens that all four of these chronic illnesses, are developed very slowly over a long period of time. Now, Peter Attia makes the argument that these four horsemen are so deadly because our current medical system is not designed to manage or prevent chronic diseases, but rather to treat acute diseases, after they’ve already happened.”Outlive” is basically a guide to that prevention, and this book will probably be the gift that I give every single person on their 40th birthday for a long, long time.

This is my personal favorite book about happiness, and trust me, I’ve read pretty much every book on happiness. Dan Gilbert is a psychologist from Harvard, and in his book, he argues that happiness doesn’t function the way we assume it does. Happiness isn’t something you gain or lose based on external events in your life. Rather, your mind will alter how it perceives external events to maintain a consistent modest level of happiness. Put simply, everyone is slightly delusional about the past and future, and this delusion exists to maintain some degree of satisfaction in our lives.

Gilbert calls this the psychological immune system, and argues that people who are miserable, it’s because their psychological immune systems, are failing due to some sort of dysfunctional belief or extreme negative event.

Check it out. Professional poker player, Annie Duke, utilizes her background in poker as a way to teach effective decision-making. And that is, don’t think of it in terms of all or nothing, yes or no, success or failure, but think of decisions in terms of probabilities. Basically, envision your decisions in life as a bunch of bets.

Bets are like little mini experiments designed to see how much you get back for what you invest.

I’ve personally found thinking in terms of probability and making decisions based on expected returns to be one of the most practical and useful skills I’ve ever developed in my life, and not just at the poker table. “Mindset” by Carol Dweck. Dweck is a psychologist at Stanford, and she found that people who believe they can change and get better are the ones who tend to change and get better. And people who believe that they can never change, and that they’re just screwed, well, surprise, surprise, they don’t change, and they spend their lives feeling screwed.

Dweck called these two dispositions a growth mindset and a fixed mindset. And guess what, motherfucker? You wanna have a growth mindset. Daniel Kahneman won a Nobel Prize for his life’s work, and this book summarizes all of it.

Basically, our mind has two systems, system one and system two.

System one is extremely fast, intuitive, and unconscious. System two is slow, methodical, and highly aware. System one is great to generate quick responses in complex situations. It’s what we often think of as our gut instinct.

System one tends to do well in social or emotional situations or predicting outcomes of highly complex circumstances.
System two is great when you need thoroughness and accuracy. You wouldn’t wanna build a rocket or a nuclear plant based on your gut instinct. You build it based on slow methodical system two thinking. Kahneman argues that many of our personal and social problems arise when we misuse our two systems and mistakenly use one instead of the other.

Sometimes we try to overanalyze our emotional problems or feel our way through difficult analytical problems.

Being aware of our systems and what they are good for can help us approach life in a more harmonious way. Nietzsche said, “There are two conflicting moral impulses within us all.” The first is meritocratic. The spoil should go to the victor. If you’re smarter, stronger, faster, more clever, more powerful, you deserve the rewards of your effort and ingenuity.
Nietzsche called this master morality. The second belief system is that we should care for the weak, alleviate people suffering, help the unfortunate, and give special attention and care to those who need it most.

Nietzsche called this slave morality. Master and slaved morality have been in an eternal struggle, both between societies but also within societies for most of human history. Wars have been fought over it, religions have been founded and destroyed because of it, and the modern-day political left and right are the legacies of the impulses towards master and slave morality within us all.

Each has its benefits to society, and each is necessary, but when unchecked by the other, both have the seeds of tyranny and downfall.”Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind” by Shunya Suzuki is, in my opinion, the best introduction to Buddhist practice and serious meditation that you can come across as a Westerner. Through a series of bite-sized chapters, based on his old lectures, Suzuki takes you step by step through each of the profound realizations that Buddhist thought can lead you to. For instance, that there’s a separation, between the thinking mind and the observing mind. Sure, you have thoughts, but who is it in your mind that is aware that you have thoughts?

Or non-dual awareness, the idea that the separations between anything, is completely subjective and self-invented.

Or the acceptance of the present moment as the only means to alleviate suffering. If you are one of the many Westerners who is booed curious, see what I did there? If you’re Buddhist curious, booed curious, this is an excellent starting point to begin your practice. Yeah.”And Better Angels of Our Nature,” Pinker has painstakingly mapped through both data and anecdotal accounts of the rapid decline in violence across the world the past few centuries. The level of barbarism that we find appalling today, was not only commonplace a few 100 years ago, but in many ways, it was even celebrated.

After clubbing us over the head with data for 500 pages, Pinker then spends the rest of the book theorizing why the world is becoming more peaceful and nonviolent. His ideas range from literacy, increasing people’s capacity for empathy, to technology making people more comfortable and secure, to a more interconnected society requiring more people to rely on one another. It’s a fascinating read from start to finish.

It absolutely changed my view of the world. “Fear and Trembling” by Soren Kierkegaard. The Danish philosopher uses a biblical story of Abraham and Isaac to illustrate a deep psychological truth. And that is that, ultimately, to give our lives any sense of meaning and psychological stability, we must choose to believe certain things matter more than ourselves. And this choice requires what he called a leap of faith. Whether it’s a religion, a family, a relationship, or a career mission, we all must choose, at some point, to give our lives over to something.

And the terrifying thing is that we must do this without knowing if it’s the right thing or not. This is where faith comes in. It’s not that this is a secular book with a religious example, it’s more that this book shows you that nothing is really secular, and all commitments are ultimately religious to some degree or another. “Deep Work” by Cal Newport.
Some work can survive distraction and task-switching, but some work, particularly, creative work or really hard problem-solving, is greatly harmed by distraction and task-switching. Now, the problem Newport argues is that in the modern world of the internet and social media, we are increasingly being swamped in distraction and task-switching. Now, Newport says that, “People who are able to protect their attention and engage what he calls deep work, will have a huge leg up in the 21st century.” He then gives you strategies to deep work into your life. The self-help classic from 20 years ago, “The Power of Now,” argues that most of our suffering occurs because we are fixated on the past or worrying about imaginary futures.

Tolle teaches us to become present in a classic meditative sense, and it turns out once we become good at remaining present, most of our worries, anxieties, and concerns melt away, because we recognize them for what they always were.

Fucking imaginary. “The Blank Slate” by Stephen Pinker. There’s a persistent idea throughout history that people are born perfect and innocent, and that any dysfunction they exhibit later in life is caused by some sort of trauma or injustice. This theory of the blank slate is seductive and has converted many of history’s greatest thinkers, from John Locke to Karl Marx.

But unfortunately, today, we know conclusively that it is simply not true. A great amount of people’s personalities, dispositions, beliefs, and dysfunctions are genetically-driven.

Pinker breaks down the research showing this is true, but he also shows the dramatic, political implications of this. This is an important book for understanding human nature and coming to terms with our prejudices. The world is a chaotic mess and we are surrounded by randomness and unpredictability, yet we don’t like admitting that to ourselves.
So we find patterns and randomness and tell ourselves stories that justify our actions and behaviors. And inevitably, these stories make us look, like a brilliant hero.

The book is full of amusing anecdotes and stories, both fictional and real, of people who were fooled by randomness and managed to convince themselves they knew what they were doing in a completely chaotic and fucked up world. John Gottman is the preeminent relationship researcher in the world on what makes relationships work, and what makes them fail catastrophically. And in his book, “Seven Principles for Making a Marriage Work,” he has uncovered a number of counterintuitive findings.

For example, did you know the happiest couples, don’t resolve all their problems or that compromise isn’t always the answer, or that fighting is sometimes kind of healthy, or that the most predictive part of your relationship isn’t what you communicate, but rather how it’s communicated? Yeah, I didn’t know that shit either till I read this book. Clearly written by a self-absorbed jackass. This juvenile piece of pseudophilosophy argues that, “In the age of information abundance, we all face an existential crisis of choosing what matters.” He goes on to argue that sacrifice is a necessary component of happiness, and that failure and embarrassment, are actually healthy experiences that we should all embrace.

It’s sold like 15 million copies, so clearly, people give way too many fucks. But the author is extremely handsome, so I have to recommend you buy it.

Copy Catalyser: Simple Sales Pages
https://warriorplus.com/o2/a/n1kylb1/0

ReMarkable Paper Pro vs Remarkable 2 | Comparison and Recommendation

Thinking about getting into in inking spaceband you’re, looking at the remarkable and you’re determining, should you get the remarkable paper Pro, which is the new released device or should you look at the remarkable 2, which has been out for a number of years today, we’re going to uncover which device is best For you one thing I do want to highlight one thing that remarkable does offer isa 100 day return guarantee. So, if you’re unsure which device to get, you could go ahead and pick up both of them. Try them all for 100 days and return them risk-free now, as we dive into these Wiant you to understand that device on my left, isa remarkable two and it’s priced at just about $ 400 versus the new released remarkable paper, Pruis priced at $ 579.

This does include the marker but. It doesn’t include any additional portfolios or type portfolio cases, just the device and the standard marker alone. If you want to upgrade the marker as well, there’s additional cost for that first and foremost. Let’s talk about the actual form factor of the device.

When I look at the original R2 you’re going to see the device itself is very thin, very lightweight and is traditionally smaller than the new release paper Pro now when look at this device compared to the new design paper Pro just top- down feature alone, you’re going to notice that there’s a Little bit more thickness now at first I thought this would add some weight, but due to the increased size, when its in my lap definitely doesn’t notice it it’s very distributed across the weight of the device and when it comes to utilizing the overall tablet itself the bezel lines between rm2 and The payer Pro are almost identical matter of fact.

The large bezel on the bottom is almost exactly the same size now one thing we did lose a lot of people used to think that this two tone was part of the casing itself.

That’s actually part of the device and. You can see in the paper Pro we no longer have that beveling there and we just have the actual white screen space and the screen itself. So, you do pick up a little bit more screen to size, ratio with the paper Pro, but with the R2 you still Havea very comparable size space. Now some of the big features that came with this. Obviously the Promodel. This paper PE model is going to have some newer features because it is the new flagship device. A couple of those features Beyond just the size of the screen is.

This is offered in color weave the ability to use highlighting tools and even see color PDF files.

So, if you’re marking up say a PowerPoint presentation or a graph that has color, you’re going to be able to see that easier on your paper, Pro you’re still able to see the grayscale shades on the rm2. But the paper Pein.

That color adds a big feature and for digital planners being able to use the paper PE and have color highlighting is huge, especially those that benefit from color blocking. For me, I like to use yellow as a means of scheduling personal time for, myself orange is dedicated meetings. Versus pink is things that are related to my family. Nowa still has that ability to use the highlighter but you. The contrast that you see is not near the contrast that comes in color now on both devices what’s really cool about remarkable and the new updates that they’ve made that I can now pair multiple remarkable devices to my same accounts.

If I make an annotation here, I can allow that to sync over to here and if it’s highlighted in color here, it’ll still highlight here, but on the cloud version or the app version of the device can see those highlights. So that is really awesome that we can do that and if you are someone, that is currently using remarkable one or remarkable two and you’re thinking about getting the paper Pro or you have it on order.

Wellik’ll tells you it’s seamless to go ahead pair this device and then all your notes and annotations will come down to it from the cloud awesome experience there there’s not a lot of work that has to be done to bring this device online.

So, the first thing is to consider in this. Is the actualize and some of the hardware benefits obviously size is Big.

Color is another big thing and the last Hardware device that comes to this device, is the ability to have that back, lit screen now that is huge. If you were going to be someone that’s going to be taking notes in low lit spaces, but if you’re at your desk or taking them in a well-lit lecture hall, the rm2 is going to be perfect for doing that the contrast is great. There isn’t a lot of glares across either of these devices.

Especially when you have a top-down light.

You can kind of see from what we’re doing here. As we increase the intensity of the light.

We still have a pretty good form factor of color, that’s present and it doesn’t get washed out, but in low light situations, as we’ve Illustrated with other ink devices.

Havenga back display is huge, and this upgrade to the paper Pro is an awesome feature and one you may want to consider. But what about the actual writing experience itself when they came out with the paper Pro, they had it? Introduce a new technology to bring color to life, and they did that and probably, the biggest and notable thing that I’ve seen is the actual pens themselves they look traditionally about the same, and this is the plus version of this pen. It’s not the standard marker version, but the one thing you’ll notice. When you put this one on the device, it’ll, actually charge the pen itself has to be charged to be able to use versus. This stylist can be easily written, just by utilizing the device. Now I go ahead, and I write on either one of these devices. I feel there’s a little bit more.

Friction on the paper Pro than there is on the rm2, but I feel like the ink on the rm2 is a little softer.

It seems a little smoother, but I also notice the responsiveness is a lot faster on the paper Pro.

It seems like there’s almost no leg and just a little bit of leg here now. The refresh screen overall is a lot faster, and that could help illustrate that so when it comes to being able to navigate throughout the system of using a paper planner you’re going to find that the paper PE is going to bring a little bit faster navigation process than what you would see on Rm2, but for the most part, it’s not a huge not noticeable difference. If you haven’t seen seethe speed increases of the paper Pro, so don’t let that be a real factor to deter you away from therm2. I believe both of these devices do a really good job at navigating PDFs and even navigating throughout the system.

One thing that I will tell you is big is the actual type. When I pull up the type here, I can go ahead and type on this.

Screen can hit the type of tool, and I can go to type on the screen now with the device. If you did not get the keyboard portfolio, you can still go ahead. And type on the screen and you’re going to see that that. You have this keyboard that comes up and I’m, going to pull up the same one here, just so weave that edit text now I’m going to go ahead and write first, I’m going to do the same thing over here.

I personally feel the responsiveness on the paper Pro when it comes to using an onboard keyboard is just a hair faster when I zoom in on both of these devices the quality and texture of the device. I feel like there’s a little bit more pixelation ingrained in the R2, but the Pro itself seems very sharp you’re, going to notice that there’s a little bit of a color Hue. With that Beckwith display on or off.

I feel that neither one really takes away from the device itself.

Sometimes this has to refresh a little more frequently to keep the device up to date than what you would see on the paper Pro, but for the most part the quality of the screen displays and how much grainer, how much pixelation really isn’t noticeable so. Once again, that’s not something that would deter me from using one device versus the other device. The true intention of these devices is to be a distraction, free notetaking device, and they made that very clear.

Even whether release the paper Pro as they did whether originally released rm2 and they still have that feature it’s still a quality of the remarkable, and that is what the remarkable is all about having a digital presence where you can take handwritten notes and be able to synchronize save those notes without Having stacks and notebooks and either device, if that’s what you’re looking to accomplish, is going to fit your needs and when you embrace the qualities the remarkable and the distraction free device that, it is and incorporate a paper like planner like.

The key to success. Planner you’re going to have that distraction, free environment, but now.

You have a planner, that’s going to help you. Take your vision, your thoughts and ideas and bring them down on paper so that you can develop action steps to really help enhance your plans to reach those goals that you want.

Now, if you’re looking at our planner you, want to learn more about that, go ahead, and check out the link in the description, we have four different additions, everything from a personal, Professional, business and executive Edition the additions are designed to fit where you are in life. If it be someone that is in retirement or have work in family that you want to balance the personal addition is going to help you achieve that, if you’re growing your profession and you’re tracking meetings and projects the professionalism to best suit you.

But if you’re, someone that is organizing a business starting from the ground, upon expanding a department or bringing new products and services to life, our business planner has our business.

Organizational operating system is really going to help you home in on not only the goals you have this year but help you develop a plan over the next 2 to three years. Ianthe executive planner includes a 30-minute session with me, so we can talk about your objectives. But more importantly, it has that team Builder, when you start to build your bench in your organization, and bring people into the folds you’re, going to find great results and when you take that alongside our business organization system and help, others build on the principles that you have for the goals.

Of your team you’re going to see monumental results and when we look at this on the remarkable being able to have that all in front of us and being able to take those notes and really focus on those plans in a distraction, free environment.

It really allows us to focus on what’s important.

Take away from this when you look at these two devices, if you are looking for a larger screen, color and backlit.

The paper Pro is probably best for you but if those things really don’t attract you to that device.

The rm2 is still a very high quality. Device it still has all the same: great writing, features and software, that you’re going to see in the paper Pro, I’m Brandon boner Creator and founder of the key SS planner. If you want to learn more about that, go ahead and follow this channel got be.

https://www.webfire.com/a/?id=39079&aff=1