Robotics is one of those opportunities that can completely transform a student. It changes the way they view failure, equips them with technical and teamworking skills, and gives them something to be passionate about. I designed my high school's VEX Robotics program from the ground up, from designing, equipping, and maintaining the robotics lab to teaching students building, programming, game analysis, documentation, and interviewing skills. I'd love to help you develop your program.
I was watching a video with a sense of quiet appreciation. It lunch time on a school day when Samuel Suresh, a creator I’d followed for years, announced the winners of GoodNote's international note-taking competition, Think in Ink. As he went through the honorable mentions, I couldn't help but notice his keen eye for finding insightful things to say about each submission. Then came the drumroll, the moment for the runners-up, and that's when it happened. He said my name (and he said it correctly). In that moment, a feeling of pure elation and validation washed over me. I may have freaked out a bit.
In the age of AI, where large language models excel at generating endless streams of words, the power of a single, well-crafted visual note remains. While AI can explain a complex topic conversationally, there’s still incredible value in the visual element, especially in STEM subjects. My students agree—they’ve even encouraged me to compile my notes into a textbook. This competition was an opportunity to prove that visual learning isn't just aesthetic; it's a vital tool for true understanding.
Watching Samuel's videos over the years has profoundly influenced my approach to thinking and teaching. By the time the competition launched in October, I was ready, having already honed my craft earlier that year (I challenged myself to create forty 1-page sketch notes for the forty days of Lent).
For my submission, I chose to create a visual note on breadboards—a topic that, ironically, I had excelled at in college through sheer compliance. I could follow instructions to get my circuits working for my electrical engineering classes, but I never truly grasped the underlying concepts. Now, in the first months of piloting my new engineering course, I needed a way to introduce this intimidating component to my students in an easy-to-understand way.
I dove into research, looking at complex diagrams, reading textbooks, and watching various videos. I even researched the history of breadboards to add a compelling, story-like element to the note. Distilling all those layers of information into a single, organized graphic was a fulfilling challenge that cemented my own understanding while crafting an invaluable resource for my students. This is what I came up with.

Caption: a single-page sketch note on breadboard basics.
The ultimate success wasn't the prize, as cool as a new iPad and Apple Pencil Pro are. The true win was seeing the note come to life in my classroom. My students used the graphic I created, and I observed how they used their knowledge of breadboards to troubleshoot their circuits. The note, born from my own struggle and a desire to help my students, was now a powerful teaching tool.