You already use AI. For emails. Research. Ideas. That's nice, but building something with it is different. When you make a thing that didn't exist yesterday, and people can use it, your whole picture of what's possible shifts. Kids get there fast. Adults overthink it.
First cohort wrapped in May. Next one in the works. Small group by design — get on the list and I'll let you know when dates land.
There are no slides. Each session I show you a new AI tool. I use it live, with a real example. Then you use it on your own project. If you get stuck, I'm there. If you finish early, you help someone else. At the end of the session you have something to show. Even if it's rough.
Kids don't read the manual. They press buttons. They try things. They fix it when it breaks. That's how they learn fast. We do the same thing here. You try. You break stuff. You show it to the group before it's done. That's how it sticks.
Every builder gets access to the Playground during the program. Your project lives there. After the program it stays. Permanently. On the wall with everyone else's work.
I build with AI every day. Sites, tools, products, content. Not because it's my job, because it's how I learn. I'm also a Partner at CI&T, a publicly traded AI company, but this program isn't that. This is my weekend practice.
AI Lemonade Stand was co-founded with educator Sina Monjazeb. The bet we're making is simple: the people who do best in this shift won't be the most technical. They'll be the most human.
Drop your email. I'll let you know when the next cohort opens — usually a few weeks ahead.
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