Amy Estrada
235 posts

Amy Estrada
@AmyEstrada827
Mom, teacher, National Literacy Consultant for Benchmark Education

Vanessa Van Edwards shares a game-changing finding from a high school likability study: The #1 predictor of who was the most popular wasn't looks, grades, humor, athleticism, or extroversion—it was having the longest list of people they liked. Across multiple schools and grades (9th–12th), the "cool kids" were the first to like others: greeting classmates in hallways, inviting people to sit with them, spotting good in everyone. Liking more people made them more likable—reciprocity in action. We can train this: Enter rooms assuming "I could like most of these people if I ask the right questions or set them up to shine." Hunt for positives—it flips how others see you. 59-sec clip on becoming a "first liker" for instant social edge 👇 Who's the "first liker" in your life? Or try it today—how many people can you genuinely like in your next interaction? Share your results!















Vote here on our NAIA Flag Football end of the year awards! Most Valuable Playmaker: Alexa Wilson of @NightHawksWFlag Ana Vincensini of @warnerflag Chihiro Iwata of @KWUFlagFB @jazmin_rhoden of @Keiser_WFlagFB #playmakerscorner #pmcflag

Vote here on our NAIA Flag Football end of the year awards! Most Valuable Playmaker: Alexa Wilson of @NightHawksWFlag Ana Vincensini of @warnerflag Chihiro Iwata of @KWUFlagFB @jazmin_rhoden of @Keiser_WFlagFB #playmakerscorner #pmcflag

















