Corinne

100 posts

Corinne

Corinne

@corinnebriers

Former pro athlete. Youth soccer coach. Homeschooling mom. Entrepreneur. Obsessed with how children learn. Building with AI.

Katılım Mart 2010
89 Takip Edilen62 Takipçiler
HeyGen
HeyGen@HeyGen·
We solved character consistency. Forever Avatar V captures you in 15 seconds and holds your identity across every video. Change the look, outfit, and setting to create unlimited versions of you. RT + comment "AvatarV" below and I'll DM 100 credits to test it out (must follow)
English
1.6K
1K
2.3K
757.4K
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
@homegymcoop Haha. Love it! Just keep adding more attachments, their creative courses will continue to surprise you! This is my kiddos half of the gym…
English
0
0
2
61
Cooper Mitchell
Cooper Mitchell@homegymcoop·
I built a monkey bar course in my new home gym. This is the first of many challenges the kids have created. The durability of kids is unmatched.
English
11
6
147
7.9K
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
Agreed! We have that book and read with our kids repeatedly. it is a helpful distinction for parents! Also, in addition to teaching these concepts here’s a tip I learned when my kiddo was 3 and wandered off (I couldn't remember what she was wearing in that panicked moment when security was trying to help). So now we have a rule: I take a picture of them before we walk into any big crowded space. Then I have exactly what they're wearing when it matters most.
English
0
0
0
18
Now See This
Now See This@now_see_this·
@BillAckman This is a great book that is appropriate to read to children of all ages that doesn’t scare them and educates them on what to do when they get separated or are approached by “tricky people.” A must read for parents and children. amzn.to/4bdGKtK
English
1
0
1
2.1K
Bill Ackman
Bill Ackman@BillAckman·
Important advice for parents
Miyandy@Amahashi_

I worked 20 years for a child sex trafficking rescue group. I want you to know this: 90% of Lost Children Are Found Within 30 Minutes. That statistic should both comfort you and wake you up. Most lost children are found quickly. But the ones who aren’t? They usually made one mistake. And here’s the uncomfortable truth: It’s often the exact thing most parents teach them. We tell our kids: “If you get lost, come find me.” It sounds logical. It sounds empowering. It’s WRONG! The Mistake Most Lost Children Make: When children realize they’re separated, they do three things almost automatically: They panic. They wander. They try to find you. Every step makes them harder to locate. From a search standpoint, movement creates chaos. Parents retrace their steps. Security scans zones. Staff lock down areas. Search works best when movement stops. When a child keeps walking, they move outside the original search radius. Helpers are looking where they were last seen — not where they’ve wandered. Stillness increases probability. Movement expands the problem. The first lesson is not “go find me.” It’s this: Stop. Stay. Yell. Why Stillness Wins: Think like a search team. If a child stays put: Parents can retrace steps. Security can scan systematically. Helpers converge to one fixed location. The search radius remains small. If a child keeps moving: The search area expands. Adults pass each other. Missed connections multiply. Minutes stretch into hours. Stillness keeps the math on your side. Teach Them Who to Approach: The second mistake we make as parents? We say, “Find an adult.” Not any adult. Not the nearest stranger. Children need a filter. Teach them to look for, if at all possible: A mother with children. Caregivers who already have kids with them are statistically among the safest people to approach in public settings. They are visible, stationary, and more likely to engage quickly. It’s a clear, concrete instruction. Children don’t process vague categories like “safe adult.” They process visuals. “Find a mom with kids” is visual. A Phone Only Helps If the Number Is Known: We often assume phones solve everything. They don’t — unless your child can use one. Even young children can memorize a 10-digit phone number with repetition. But you must train it. Practice it like a song. Sing it in the car. Chant it at bedtime. Turn it into rhythm. Repetition becomes recall. In an emergency, recall matters more than theory. The Code Word Rule: One more layer of protection. Choose a private family code word. Something only your household knows. If someone approaches and says: “Your mom sent me.” Your child asks: “What’s the code word?” No word. No go. This simple rule eliminates manipulation attempts instantly. It gives your child agency without requiring them to evaluate character. Real Safety Is Training — Not Luck! We don’t get safer by hoping. We get safer by practicing. Teach: • Phone number • Code word • Stop, stay, yell • Find a mom with kids Multiple skills. Simple instructions. Clear visuals. Five minutes of training can replace hours of panic. This isn’t about fear. It’s about preparation. Because when a child gets separated, the clock starts. And what they do in the first minute determines what the next thirty look like. That’s real protection.

English
69
298
4.1K
1.9M
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
Excellent tips! I'd add one more - when my kiddo was 3 and wandered off, I couldn't remember what he was wearing in that panicked moment. Now we have a rule: I take a picture of them before we walk into any big crowded space. Then I have exactly what they're wearing when it matters most.
English
0
1
20
1.1K
Miyandy
Miyandy@Amahashi_·
I worked 20 years for a child sex trafficking rescue group. I want you to know this: 90% of Lost Children Are Found Within 30 Minutes. That statistic should both comfort you and wake you up. Most lost children are found quickly. But the ones who aren’t? They usually made one mistake. And here’s the uncomfortable truth: It’s often the exact thing most parents teach them. We tell our kids: “If you get lost, come find me.” It sounds logical. It sounds empowering. It’s WRONG! The Mistake Most Lost Children Make: When children realize they’re separated, they do three things almost automatically: They panic. They wander. They try to find you. Every step makes them harder to locate. From a search standpoint, movement creates chaos. Parents retrace their steps. Security scans zones. Staff lock down areas. Search works best when movement stops. When a child keeps walking, they move outside the original search radius. Helpers are looking where they were last seen — not where they’ve wandered. Stillness increases probability. Movement expands the problem. The first lesson is not “go find me.” It’s this: Stop. Stay. Yell. Why Stillness Wins: Think like a search team. If a child stays put: Parents can retrace steps. Security can scan systematically. Helpers converge to one fixed location. The search radius remains small. If a child keeps moving: The search area expands. Adults pass each other. Missed connections multiply. Minutes stretch into hours. Stillness keeps the math on your side. Teach Them Who to Approach: The second mistake we make as parents? We say, “Find an adult.” Not any adult. Not the nearest stranger. Children need a filter. Teach them to look for, if at all possible: A mother with children. Caregivers who already have kids with them are statistically among the safest people to approach in public settings. They are visible, stationary, and more likely to engage quickly. It’s a clear, concrete instruction. Children don’t process vague categories like “safe adult.” They process visuals. “Find a mom with kids” is visual. A Phone Only Helps If the Number Is Known: We often assume phones solve everything. They don’t — unless your child can use one. Even young children can memorize a 10-digit phone number with repetition. But you must train it. Practice it like a song. Sing it in the car. Chant it at bedtime. Turn it into rhythm. Repetition becomes recall. In an emergency, recall matters more than theory. The Code Word Rule: One more layer of protection. Choose a private family code word. Something only your household knows. If someone approaches and says: “Your mom sent me.” Your child asks: “What’s the code word?” No word. No go. This simple rule eliminates manipulation attempts instantly. It gives your child agency without requiring them to evaluate character. Real Safety Is Training — Not Luck! We don’t get safer by hoping. We get safer by practicing. Teach: • Phone number • Code word • Stop, stay, yell • Find a mom with kids Multiple skills. Simple instructions. Clear visuals. Five minutes of training can replace hours of panic. This isn’t about fear. It’s about preparation. Because when a child gets separated, the clock starts. And what they do in the first minute determines what the next thirty look like. That’s real protection.
English
77
7.3K
18.1K
4.1M
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
Love how you described the day unfolding - and your support just being there with her. After 20+ years coaching these little ones: being out there, around the soccer, even just sitting on mommy or daddy's lap watching - that's enough. Simply associating with the idea is enough. I've seen so many 4-year-olds cry and barely participate all season... then become studs as teenagers. They all find their groove eventually. She's got a great soccer dad. ⚽
English
0
0
1
724
Pat McAfee
Pat McAfee@PatMcAfeeShow·
We took baby girl Mackenzie to her first soccer practice this morning.. I grew up playing soccer.. I spent A LOT of my childhood kicking a soccer ball. It’s a beautiful sport that can teach life lessons and can help create some silky feet athleticism.. so I was certainly EXCITED. Mackenzie will play a lot of sports and have a lot of first days.. but the first ever sports practice.. had my mind racing towards the most positive potential outcome. 2039 Women’s World Cup as a 16 year old.. 2040 Summer Olympics as a 17 year old. It’s all a possibility if she takes to soccer like a fish to water.. what if she walks out there and just starts dicing kids up FIRST DAY.. “WHO KNOWS WHAT’S IN A CARSEAT IN THE BACKSEAT RIGHT NOW?” We get there and walk in.. she gets her first jersey. She was handed jersey number 9 👀👀 A TRUE 9 POSSIBLY We walked over to the field.. then to the area she was gonna be practicing.. the anticipation and excitement grew with every step We got to our field a little early.. I ran around with her a little bit to get her warmed up.. hopefully get her comfy with what’s going on.. she was really DOIN SOCCER.. WE were doing soccer Then it was time for the coaches and other players to come onto the field.. and BOY.. SHE DID NOT participate. Tears and yelling for 30 minutes straight. ZERO completed drills in actual soccer practice but A LOT of crying and watching from the side… turns out, today was a mental rep day.. and I LOVE what we’ve started. It’s all still possible my love… Do your journey. I can’t wait to ride alongside all of it.
Pat McAfee tweet mediaPat McAfee tweet mediaPat McAfee tweet mediaPat McAfee tweet media
English
203
119
7.3K
412.7K
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
Love seeing this! Very cool. The iterative "make it better" loop is so powerful. Now I'm thinking about how to do this for our youth soccer program - tracking player progressions, skills mastered, what to work on next. Did you build the whole thing through conversation or did you give it reference material?
English
0
0
0
31
Nolan Gore | SMB Lawn Cowboy
Nolan Gore | SMB Lawn Cowboy@TheNolanGore·
I now understand… I wanted a Jiu Jitsu app to understand progressions and track submissions. I asked my openclaw to make one. It was meh. I asked it to make it better…”like bro…I want it to look like this…cool…?…and add this feature….” Well it turned out to be pretty cool. My mind is blown. I actually use this app with my son to prep for JJ class. tap-list-eight.vercel.app
English
8
0
30
4.9K
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
AI simply removes the coding friction so creativity can run free.
English
0
0
0
26
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
This is awesome. And same here. My kiddo already built 6 games with his @openclaw agent. Watching kids go from "help me" to "I got this" with AI tools is wild. His creativity is unleashed - not bogged down by syntax errors.
Corinne tweet media
Sebastien Bubeck@SebastienBubeck

My 9 yo is now fully independent with codex and it's insane to watch, we built a few games together and then he went off to build his own tower defense, adding features by himself and testing them ... crazy

English
1
0
1
123
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
@thriving__kids Same energy in youth soccer. Coaches think they need "fitness" - so kids groan through sprint lines. But make it a tag game instead? And they'll sprint 10x more without even realizing it. Play IS the training.
English
0
0
1
14
Raising Healthy Families
Raising Healthy Families@thriving__kids·
Me: Hey kids, want to go for a walk? Kids: No! I'm tired! My legs are sore! Its too cold. Me: Hey kids, want to go sledding? Kids: Yay!!!!! (kids proceed to run up a snowy hill for 2 hours with no mention of being tired, sore legs or cold weather) This is the power of play.
Raising Healthy Families tweet media
English
4
14
103
2.8K
Kieron Button
Kieron Button@kieronbutton17·
Youth Football/Soccer Coaches, It's great to share lots of coaching points with the children in a training session, but they'll likely only retain 2-3 max. Keep it simple! I observed a session 3 weeks ago, The coach delivered 8 solid coaching points, then quizzed the kids. As a team, they recalled just 3/8. Sometimes less is more!
English
3
2
37
4.8K
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
Doh. So this happened today: Asked my @openclaw assistant Sebastian to send 269 reminder texts to soccer parents. First batch ran out of credits halfway. When I refilled, he resent ALL numbers instead of just the failures. Duplicate texts. Yikes. Had to manually send apology texts - created more work for myself 😅 But…Sebastian apologized, saved what he learned, and now tracks success/failure before retrying. This is what working with AI actually looks like - not perfect, sometimes makes you want to pull your hair out, but iterating fast.
Corinne tweet media
English
0
0
0
51
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
@orthodoxmason Ha! We had the same idea - built a Wings of Fire typing game for ours. 'You can just do things' is the homeschool motto
English
0
0
1
23
orthodoxmason
orthodoxmason@orthodoxmason·
You can just do things. You can make your kids a Redwall typing game
English
9
3
112
5K
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
@Principal_Jon Seeing this already. Homeschool families in our area are connecting over sports, arts, co-ops. The community building is happening organically. More is coming for sure.
English
0
0
0
9
Principal Jon
Principal Jon@Principal_Jon·
What's my prediction for the future of homeschooling? More microschools. There will be more & more families getting together over shared values to build community. And it can't come fast enough!
English
70
182
1.8K
37.8K
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
@nick_bisesi @threejs So cool. This is incredible for homeschool anatomy! Way better than static diagrams. Would love to see this expanded to other body systems. 🦴
English
1
0
1
40
Nick Bisesi
Nick Bisesi@nickbisesi_·
real-time skeletal visualization using MediaPipe and @threejs. built for K-12 anatomy education but there are so many cool applications.
English
79
174
1.5K
103.3K
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
@BeneSB_ This. Fun isn't a distraction from training - it's what drives kids to train harder and longer than any discipline ever could.
English
0
0
0
22
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
@nhfoley So cool! Love the peg wall idea. We actually built a full rock climbing wall and monkey bars in our single car garage. Been a lifesaver.
Corinne tweet media
English
3
2
95
2.9K
Nick Foley
Nick Foley@nhfoley·
Took the kids no more than 5 minutes to realize the peg wall organizer we're building in their room is actually just a 2D platformer waiting to be configured:
Nick Foley tweet media
English
38
72
2.7K
100.9K
Dana Palubiak
Dana Palubiak@DanaPalubiak·
A child who reads twenty minutes a day encounters millions of words in a year. That exposure builds vocabulary, background knowledge, and language patterns. No worksheet can compete with that. Reading widely is one of the most powerful learning engines we have.
English
47
704
2.9K
47.6K
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
Yes to this. We love Synthesis (both teams and tutor). And when we signed up for the lifetime membership when they originally launched - several subjects were supposed to be in the pipeline and released. But they have made significant improvements in Math, so we are still benefiting greatly and recommend both teams and tutor to our friends!
English
0
0
0
26
Kate Kinard
Kate Kinard@KateKinard·
@chrisman Please add more subjects, maybe some phonics or poetry memorization. We love synthesis
English
1
0
1
79
Chrisman
Chrisman@chrisman·
The goal is to be the best tutor in the world, screen-based or otherwise. We are currently running studies in partnership with governments to prove this.
Hannah Ward 👩🏻‍🏫 Mom (x3) | Learning Designer@HannahWardEdu

Hold up. I was just able to get Synthesis Tutor (the absolute best screen-based math program for elementary kids I've ever found) for ALL my kids for only $119 for the year? That just happened? FAMILY PLAN!? @chrisman @synthesischool When did your pricing become so generous?!

English
6
1
91
11.3K
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
@HannahWardEdu @chrisman @synthesischool This is awesome - family plan pricing makes it way more accessible. We signed up for the lifetime Synthesis Tutor when it first originally launched and we still use it. Maybe even one day they will release the other subjects that were originally teased.
English
0
0
3
220
Corinne
Corinne@corinnebriers·
Great explanation. Love the S’s framework - I’ve used it for years. With the littles I tend to translate it into animals: “cheetah speed” to shut down, “surf” to stay sideways, and “snake speed” (wait, wait, wait… then strike when they make a mistake). Kids remember it instantly.
English
0
0
1
57
Jamie Birch
Jamie Birch@JB_SoccerCoach·
The 4 S's of Defending (and why every young footballer needs to learn them) 👇
Jamie Birch tweet media
English
7
21
267
46.3K