![]() ![]() These Barbies are part of the big Inspiring Women project. ![]() The collection also includes Maggie Aderin-Pocock, a #space #scientist and educator from the United Kingdom Antje Boetius, a marine researcher and microbiologist from Germany Li Yinuo, co-founder of ETU Education, a school startup in China that offers a more personalized #education and Katya Echazarreta, an electrical #engineer who has worked on five NASA missions and the first woman born in Mexico to travel to space. □ □Īmong them are the Wojcicki sisters - Susan, a longtime #CEO of YouTube and Google’s 16th employee Anne, CEO of at-home DNA testing company 23andME and Janet, a professor of pediatrics and epidemiology at the University of California, San Francisco. released a series of one-of-a-kind dolls honoring women STEM trailblazers from around the world. What is your experience? Or do you prefer the keyboard to pen?įor #iwd2023, Mattel, Inc. (The best ideas and strategies came from writing and drawing, my colleagues can prove it □, although sometimes they can not read it.) It’s a great starting point for my #brainstorming or drafting process and, most importantly, it reminds me of my creative power and the power of my words. ![]() On the whole, writing in pen allows me to use my creative mind in a more direct and impactful way. This enhanced connection provided by pen and paper can better engage my thoughts and emotions, creating powerful fuel for my #creativity. It requires more of my mind’s attention and awareness. Writing in pen is much more personal than tapping away at a keyboard. Picking up a □️ helps me to really slow down and focus on the act of #writing or #drawing in a new and more concentrated way. It is different than staring at an empty document with a flashing, expectant cursor. Pen and blank page can #challenge my mind. □️Pen writing is key to be #creative - here are my key #learnings: ![]()
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