“Sow What? Journey-in-a-Weekend Guide” for Senior Girl Scouts

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*** Girl Scout Troop Leader Material ***

Are you a Girl Scout Troop Leader looking for support to help your high school girls take that next step toward the Gold Award?

This " Sow What? Journey-in-a-Weekend Guide " allows you to fast-track your Scouts to accomplish the " Sow What? " Journey and prepare your troop to achieve the Gold Award!

  • This “ Sow What? Journey-in-a-Weekend Guide ” is a 16-page document that directly accompanies the official Girl Scouts “ Sow What? ” student guidebook that can be purchased through Girl Scouts.
  • The “ Sow What? Journey-in-a-Weekend Guide ” is in PDF format, allowing easy emailing to your girls, and consistent format when printing on different computers and printers.
  • All pages are numbered, to easily reference during meetings.
  • Individual lessons and activities in the “ Sow What? Journey-in-a-Weekend Guide ” may be used during standard weekly, bi-weekly or monthly troop meetings, or the Guide may be used to complete the Journey in one 2-day weekend.
  • Perfect for Juliette Scouts, or girls who are part of a troop, but wish to work on their Journey individually at home, on their own time and schedule.
  • Questions We Will Answer
  • Goals for our Sow What? Journey
  • Reading and Q&A (short answer) sections accompanying all major topics of the Girl Scouts " Sow What? " Guidebook.
  • Three (3) worksheets : My Favorite Food Footprint; My Food Habits; Biodiversity and Me
  • Four (4) Family Activities that can be done as part of normal meal planning and shopping
  • 3-step plan to define and execute your Harvest Award Plan
  • Harvest Award brainstorming example to get the creative juices flowing on what you might tackle. (Note that the included example is related to the topic of food insecurity and based on organizations in the Los Angeles area, which is our troop's home base.)

Help yourself and your girls be confident and capable as they tackle the "Sow What?" journey - check out the “ Sow What? Journey-in-a-Weekend Guide ”!

Please email me any questions and thanks for looking! I HIGHLY VALUE FEEDBACK TO IMPROVE MY PRODUCT - PLEASE CONSIDER RATING THIS PURCHASE AND LETTING ME KNOW IF THERE ARE ANY CHANGES THAT WOULD MAKE THE GUIDE BETTER FOR YOUR TROOP!

*MORE "JOURNEY IN A WEEKEND GUIDE's" COMING SOON!*

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Sow What ? (Girl Scout Journey Books, Senior Book 2)

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Sow What ? (Girl Scout Journey Books, Senior Book 2) Paperback – January 1, 2009

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  • Print length 96 pages
  • Language English
  • Publisher Girl Scouts of the USA
  • Publication date January 1, 2009
  • ISBN-10 0884417352
  • ISBN-13 978-0884417354
  • See all details

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  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Girl Scouts of the USA (January 1, 2009)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 96 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0884417352
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0884417354
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 7.4 ounces
  • Best Sellers Rank: #371,470 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books )

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sow what journey book pdf

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State College Girl Scouts

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State College Girl Scouts

The  Sow What?  Journey is all about food—how and where it’s grown, harvested, processed, distributed, and consumed—and why it matters. Seniors share their knowledge and host a farmers market, inspire others to eat locally, or plan a community vegetable garden.

Part of the Journeys sequence. Earned by Senior Scouts.

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sow what journey book pdf

Explore what really matters to you and use your passion to change the world—that's what Girl Scout Journeys are all about.

Girl Scout Journeys are multi-session experiences in which girls dig deeper into their interests and use the skills they gain along the way to make a difference in their community. While badges show the world you’ve learned a new skill, Journey awards say, “I found a way to make a difference.”

During a Journey, Girl Scouts do hands-on activities, connect with experts, and take the lead on a Take Action project with their community. And once a Junior, Cadette, Senior, or Ambassador completes their Journey, they’re ready to drive lasting change in their communities by going for their Bronze, Silver, or Gold Award.

Journey requirements can be found in the Award and Badge Explorer. . Volunteers and Girl Scout caregivers can also find the requirements in the Volunteer Toolkit .

Get started on a Journey!

Find everything you need to kick-start your adventure with your grade level's Journey.

How Take Action Projects Differ from Community Service Projects

Journeys encourage Girl Scouts of all ages to think critically, boost their problem-solving skills, and make an impact. They’ll learn something new and grow their leadership skills.

Take Action projects are at the heart of all Journeys, but they’re different from the community service projects that Girl Scouts may have done—and you’ll want to understand those differences before planning a Take Action project.

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The state of AI in 2023: Generative AI’s breakout year

You have reached a page with older survey data. please see our 2024 survey results here ..

The latest annual McKinsey Global Survey  on the current state of AI confirms the explosive growth of generative AI (gen AI) tools . Less than a year after many of these tools debuted, one-third of our survey respondents say their organizations are using gen AI regularly in at least one business function. Amid recent advances, AI has risen from a topic relegated to tech employees to a focus of company leaders: nearly one-quarter of surveyed C-suite executives say they are personally using gen AI tools for work, and more than one-quarter of respondents from companies using AI say gen AI is already on their boards’ agendas. What’s more, 40 percent of respondents say their organizations will increase their investment in AI overall because of advances in gen AI. The findings show that these are still early days for managing gen AI–related risks, with less than half of respondents saying their organizations are mitigating even the risk they consider most relevant: inaccuracy.

The organizations that have already embedded AI capabilities have been the first to explore gen AI’s potential, and those seeing the most value from more traditional AI capabilities—a group we call AI high performers—are already outpacing others in their adoption of gen AI tools. 1 We define AI high performers as organizations that, according to respondents, attribute at least 20 percent of their EBIT to AI adoption.

The expected business disruption from gen AI is significant, and respondents predict meaningful changes to their workforces. They anticipate workforce cuts in certain areas and large reskilling efforts to address shifting talent needs. Yet while the use of gen AI might spur the adoption of other AI tools, we see few meaningful increases in organizations’ adoption of these technologies. The percent of organizations adopting any AI tools has held steady since 2022, and adoption remains concentrated within a small number of business functions.

Table of Contents

  • It’s early days still, but use of gen AI is already widespread
  • Leading companies are already ahead with gen AI
  • AI-related talent needs shift, and AI’s workforce effects are expected to be substantial
  • With all eyes on gen AI, AI adoption and impact remain steady

About the research

1. it’s early days still, but use of gen ai is already widespread.

The findings from the survey—which was in the field in mid-April 2023—show that, despite gen AI’s nascent public availability, experimentation with the tools  is already relatively common, and respondents expect the new capabilities to transform their industries. Gen AI has captured interest across the business population: individuals across regions, industries, and seniority levels are using gen AI for work and outside of work. Seventy-nine percent of all respondents say they’ve had at least some exposure to gen AI, either for work or outside of work, and 22 percent say they are regularly using it in their own work. While reported use is quite similar across seniority levels, it is highest among respondents working in the technology sector and those in North America.

Organizations, too, are now commonly using gen AI. One-third of all respondents say their organizations are already regularly using generative AI in at least one function—meaning that 60 percent of organizations with reported AI adoption are using gen AI. What’s more, 40 percent of those reporting AI adoption at their organizations say their companies expect to invest more in AI overall thanks to generative AI, and 28 percent say generative AI use is already on their board’s agenda. The most commonly reported business functions using these newer tools are the same as those in which AI use is most common overall: marketing and sales, product and service development, and service operations, such as customer care and back-office support. This suggests that organizations are pursuing these new tools where the most value is. In our previous research , these three areas, along with software engineering, showed the potential to deliver about 75 percent of the total annual value from generative AI use cases.

In these early days, expectations for gen AI’s impact are high : three-quarters of all respondents expect gen AI to cause significant or disruptive change in the nature of their industry’s competition in the next three years. Survey respondents working in the technology and financial-services industries are the most likely to expect disruptive change from gen AI. Our previous research shows  that, while all industries are indeed likely to see some degree of disruption, the level of impact is likely to vary. 2 “ The economic potential of generative AI: The next productivity frontier ,” McKinsey, June 14, 2023. Industries relying most heavily on knowledge work are likely to see more disruption—and potentially reap more value. While our estimates suggest that tech companies, unsurprisingly, are poised to see the highest impact from gen AI—adding value equivalent to as much as 9 percent of global industry revenue—knowledge-based industries such as banking (up to 5 percent), pharmaceuticals and medical products (also up to 5 percent), and education (up to 4 percent) could experience significant effects as well. By contrast, manufacturing-based industries, such as aerospace, automotives, and advanced electronics, could experience less disruptive effects. This stands in contrast to the impact of previous technology waves that affected manufacturing the most and is due to gen AI’s strengths in language-based activities, as opposed to those requiring physical labor.

Responses show many organizations not yet addressing potential risks from gen AI

According to the survey, few companies seem fully prepared for the widespread use of gen AI—or the business risks these tools may bring. Just 21 percent of respondents reporting AI adoption say their organizations have established policies governing employees’ use of gen AI technologies in their work. And when we asked specifically about the risks of adopting gen AI, few respondents say their companies are mitigating the most commonly cited risk with gen AI: inaccuracy. Respondents cite inaccuracy more frequently than both cybersecurity and regulatory compliance, which were the most common risks from AI overall in previous surveys. Just 32 percent say they’re mitigating inaccuracy, a smaller percentage than the 38 percent who say they mitigate cybersecurity risks. Interestingly, this figure is significantly lower than the percentage of respondents who reported mitigating AI-related cybersecurity last year (51 percent). Overall, much as we’ve seen in previous years, most respondents say their organizations are not addressing AI-related risks.

2. Leading companies are already ahead with gen AI

The survey results show that AI high performers—that is, organizations where respondents say at least 20 percent of EBIT in 2022 was attributable to AI use—are going all in on artificial intelligence, both with gen AI and more traditional AI capabilities. These organizations that achieve significant value from AI are already using gen AI in more business functions than other organizations do, especially in product and service development and risk and supply chain management. When looking at all AI capabilities—including more traditional machine learning capabilities, robotic process automation, and chatbots—AI high performers also are much more likely than others to use AI in product and service development, for uses such as product-development-cycle optimization, adding new features to existing products, and creating new AI-based products. These organizations also are using AI more often than other organizations in risk modeling and for uses within HR such as performance management and organization design and workforce deployment optimization.

AI high performers are much more likely than others to use AI in product and service development.

Another difference from their peers: high performers’ gen AI efforts are less oriented toward cost reduction, which is a top priority at other organizations. Respondents from AI high performers are twice as likely as others to say their organizations’ top objective for gen AI is to create entirely new businesses or sources of revenue—and they’re most likely to cite the increase in the value of existing offerings through new AI-based features.

As we’ve seen in previous years , these high-performing organizations invest much more than others in AI: respondents from AI high performers are more than five times more likely than others to say they spend more than 20 percent of their digital budgets on AI. They also use AI capabilities more broadly throughout the organization. Respondents from high performers are much more likely than others to say that their organizations have adopted AI in four or more business functions and that they have embedded a higher number of AI capabilities. For example, respondents from high performers more often report embedding knowledge graphs in at least one product or business function process, in addition to gen AI and related natural-language capabilities.

While AI high performers are not immune to the challenges of capturing value from AI, the results suggest that the difficulties they face reflect their relative AI maturity, while others struggle with the more foundational, strategic elements of AI adoption. Respondents at AI high performers most often point to models and tools, such as monitoring model performance in production and retraining models as needed over time, as their top challenge. By comparison, other respondents cite strategy issues, such as setting a clearly defined AI vision that is linked with business value or finding sufficient resources.

The findings offer further evidence that even high performers haven’t mastered best practices regarding AI adoption, such as machine-learning-operations (MLOps) approaches, though they are much more likely than others to do so. For example, just 35 percent of respondents at AI high performers report that where possible, their organizations assemble existing components, rather than reinvent them, but that’s a much larger share than the 19 percent of respondents from other organizations who report that practice.

Many specialized MLOps technologies and practices  may be needed to adopt some of the more transformative uses cases that gen AI applications can deliver—and do so as safely as possible. Live-model operations is one such area, where monitoring systems and setting up instant alerts to enable rapid issue resolution can keep gen AI systems in check. High performers stand out in this respect but have room to grow: one-quarter of respondents from these organizations say their entire system is monitored and equipped with instant alerts, compared with just 12 percent of other respondents.

3. AI-related talent needs shift, and AI’s workforce effects are expected to be substantial

Our latest survey results show changes in the roles that organizations are filling to support their AI ambitions. In the past year, organizations using AI most often hired data engineers, machine learning engineers, and Al data scientists—all roles that respondents commonly reported hiring in the previous survey. But a much smaller share of respondents report hiring AI-related-software engineers—the most-hired role last year—than in the previous survey (28 percent in the latest survey, down from 39 percent). Roles in prompt engineering have recently emerged, as the need for that skill set rises alongside gen AI adoption, with 7 percent of respondents whose organizations have adopted AI reporting those hires in the past year.

The findings suggest that hiring for AI-related roles remains a challenge but has become somewhat easier over the past year, which could reflect the spate of layoffs at technology companies from late 2022 through the first half of 2023. Smaller shares of respondents than in the previous survey report difficulty hiring for roles such as AI data scientists, data engineers, and data-visualization specialists, though responses suggest that hiring machine learning engineers and AI product owners remains as much of a challenge as in the previous year.

Looking ahead to the next three years, respondents predict that the adoption of AI will reshape many roles in the workforce. Generally, they expect more employees to be reskilled than to be separated. Nearly four in ten respondents reporting AI adoption expect more than 20 percent of their companies’ workforces will be reskilled, whereas 8 percent of respondents say the size of their workforces will decrease by more than 20 percent.

Looking specifically at gen AI’s predicted impact, service operations is the only function in which most respondents expect to see a decrease in workforce size at their organizations. This finding generally aligns with what our recent research  suggests: while the emergence of gen AI increased our estimate of the percentage of worker activities that could be automated (60 to 70 percent, up from 50 percent), this doesn’t necessarily translate into the automation of an entire role.

AI high performers are expected to conduct much higher levels of reskilling than other companies are. Respondents at these organizations are over three times more likely than others to say their organizations will reskill more than 30 percent of their workforces over the next three years as a result of AI adoption.

4. With all eyes on gen AI, AI adoption and impact remain steady

While the use of gen AI tools is spreading rapidly, the survey data doesn’t show that these newer tools are propelling organizations’ overall AI adoption. The share of organizations that have adopted AI overall remains steady, at least for the moment, with 55 percent of respondents reporting that their organizations have adopted AI. Less than a third of respondents continue to say that their organizations have adopted AI in more than one business function, suggesting that AI use remains limited in scope. Product and service development and service operations continue to be the two business functions in which respondents most often report AI adoption, as was true in the previous four surveys. And overall, just 23 percent of respondents say at least 5 percent of their organizations’ EBIT last year was attributable to their use of AI—essentially flat with the previous survey—suggesting there is much more room to capture value.

Organizations continue to see returns in the business areas in which they are using AI, and they plan to increase investment in the years ahead. We see a majority of respondents reporting AI-related revenue increases within each business function using AI. And looking ahead, more than two-thirds expect their organizations to increase their AI investment over the next three years.

The online survey was in the field April 11 to 21, 2023, and garnered responses from 1,684 participants representing the full range of regions, industries, company sizes, functional specialties, and tenures. Of those respondents, 913 said their organizations had adopted AI in at least one function and were asked questions about their organizations’ AI use. To adjust for differences in response rates, the data are weighted by the contribution of each respondent’s nation to global GDP.

The survey content and analysis were developed by Michael Chui , a partner at the McKinsey Global Institute and a partner in McKinsey’s Bay Area office, where Lareina Yee is a senior partner; Bryce Hall , an associate partner in the Washington, DC, office; and senior partners Alex Singla and Alexander Sukharevsky , global leaders of QuantumBlack, AI by McKinsey, based in the Chicago and London offices, respectively.

They wish to thank Shivani Gupta, Abhisek Jena, Begum Ortaoglu, Barr Seitz, and Li Zhang for their contributions to this work.

This article was edited by Heather Hanselman, an editor in the Atlanta office.

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IMAGES

  1. “Sow What? Journey-in-a-Weekend Guide” for Senior Girl Scouts

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  2. How To Guide

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  3. Buy Sow What ? (Girl Scout Journey Books, Senior Book 2) Book By

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  4. Senior Sow What? Leader’s Guide & Journey Book Set

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  5. Senior Sow What Journey Guide by Charity Dragna

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  6. “Sow What? Journey-in-a-Weekend Guide” for Senior Girl Scouts

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COMMENTS

  1. PDF Sow What?

    Sow What2. This journey encourages the girls to establish a friends and family network so you, as the leader, will be able to step back and guide rather than lead. Girls can choose to work on this journey alone, in pairs, in mini-teams, or as a larger group. Page numbers in the headings refer to the page the session starts in the adult guide.

  2. PDF Senior Sow What Journey Snapshot

    Title. Senior Sow What Journey Snapshot. Author. stebow. Subject. A summary of the Journey and how to earn it. Created Date. 5/14/2015 4:13:51 PM.

  3. PDF Senior and Ambassador Basics

    Have girls recite the Girl Scout Promise and the Girl Scout Law Have girls sing favorite song Have Girl Scout Ambassadors or Girl Scout Adults help them bridge - Leader may read girl's name and she can "bridge over" - walk across a real or interpreted bridge, etc. - Ambassadors may help Seniors put on new vest/sash.

  4. Sow What for Seniors

    Journey Series for Seniors grades 9-10. Eat Right! Feel Amazing! Save the Planet! In this 4-day virtual Sow What Journey workshop series, Girl Scout Seniors will learn how small daily choices have a big impact on the earth! In this leadership Journey, Seniors examine what they eat, how it got to them and at what cost.

  5. PDF June 2020

    S enior "Sow What" Journey Online, outdoors and on videoconferences June 2020 In this "Sow What" journey, you'll discover the broad range of global and local food system issues, connect with local programs and resources, and Take Action to advocate for change in food production, security, waste, or workers. Objectives: 1.

  6. Sow What?

    Are you a Girl Scout Senior who wants to explore the connections between food, land, and people? Then the Sow What? Journey is for you! On this website, you will find helpful resources, tips, and activities to plan and complete your journey. Learn how to make a difference in your community and the world through food choices and actions.

  7. Senior

    Arrival: Ask Seniors who arrive early to help unpack and set up any snacks and activity materials for later.; Warmups and Wellness: Get Seniors excited to begin their meeting with a warm activity or question and a wellness check. Ask them how they are feeling today and what they are excited about! Opening Ceremony: Officially open your troop meeting by reciting the Girl Scout Promise and Law.

  8. esource Guide

    Sow What? and Adult Guide Journey Book Set. 67730. AMBASSADor: Justice and Adult Guide Journey Book Set. 67715. Justicia y Guía para Adultos. Spanish translation of Justice and Adult Guide Journey Book Set. 67731. it's Your Planet - Love it! 6 w Price! DAISY: 5 Flowers, 4 Stories, 3 Cheers for Animals! and

  9. PDF Senior Sow What Journey Award Meeting 1

    Leave the last bottle of soil bare. Press down firmly on the soil to compact it. Use wood glue to stick the bottles to the wood. Make sure that the necks of the bottles protrude over the edge of the board. Now, prepare the cups. Make two small holes opposite each other at the top of the cups.

  10. Sow What? Senior Journey Download

    Senior Journey Download. $ 15.00. Sow What? Senior Journey Download. Product Number: MF-70222. Can be done in 7 meetings, a weekend or one day. The easy instructions will allow them to complete all the steps, and guide them through the planning of a Take Action project. Hands-on activities will keep their interest.

  11. "Sow What? Journey-in-a-Weekend Guide" for Senior Girl Scouts

    Journey-in-a-Weekend Guide" is a 16-page document that directly accompanies the official Girl Scouts "Sow What?" student guidebook that can be purchased through Girl Scouts. The " Sow What? Journey-in-a-Weekend Guide " is in PDF format, allowing easy emailing to your girls, and consistent format when printing on different computers ...

  12. Resource Guide

    Sow What? and Adult Guide Journey Book Set. 67730. AMBASSADOR: Justice and Adult Guide Journey Book Set. 67715. Justicia y Guía para Adultos. Spanish translation of Justice and Adult Guide Journey Book Set. 67731. It's Your Planet - Love It! 6. DAISY: 5 Flowers, 4 Stories, 3 Cheers for Animals! and

  13. Senior Sow What? Journey Series

    Journey Series. 2021 Thu Mar 25th 2021 - Thu Apr 29th (PDT) Council STEM Senior Grades-9-10. Go on a Journey with us and earn your Senior Sow What? Journey and accompanying Take Action Awards. This program is on a virtual blog site and runs from March 25rd until April 29th. New content will be posted by the end of every Thursday during the program.

  14. Sow What ? (Girl Scout Journey Books, Senior Book 2)

    Sold by: autismgrdpa22. Sow What ? (Girl Scout Journey Books, Senior Book 2) Paperback - January 1, 2009. by Naomi Person (Author) 3.7 14 ratings. See all formats and editions. The "It's Your Planet -- Love It" leadership Journey for Senior Girl Scouts (grades 9-10). See how your food network can serve up what's best for Earth -- and best for ...

  15. PDF June 2020 B JECTIVES

    S enior "Sow What" Journey Online, outdoors and on videoconferences June 2020 In this "Sow What" journey, you'll discover the broad range of global and local food system issues, connect with local programs and resources, and Take Action to advocate for change in food production, security, waste, or workers. O B JECTIVES : 1.

  16. PDF It's Your Planet—Love It!

    Sow What? On this Journey, Seniors learn about food—how and where it's grown, processed, distributed, and consumed— and why it matters. They may take a trip to a fruit orchard or farm, talk to a grocery store manager about how she buys foods and keeps it fresh, or prepare a dinner for their families using only locally grown ingredients.

  17. PDF GIRLtopia

    This journey is their chance to imagine a perfect world—for girls. They're invited to create their vision as an art project—in any medium they choose. Then they'll take action to make their vision a reality. Leaders, after all, are visionaries! Step 1: Make yourself familiar with the girl's books. Read a few of the articles, check out ...

  18. PDF What Seniors Do Choose a Journey and earn the awards Want to earn more

    Choose a Journey and earn the awards Want to earn more Badges? Add the Badge sets GIRLtopia sow What? MISSION: SISTERHOOD! Use them all with The Girl's Guide to Girl Scouting O.ndbook old ward Financial Literacy Cookie Business power Customer Loyalty . Created Date:

  19. Sow What?

    The Sow What? Journey is all about food—how and where it's grown, harvested, processed, distributed, and consumed—and why it matters. Seniors share their knowledge and host a farmers market, inspire others to eat locally, or plan a community vegetable garden. Part of the Journeys sequence. Earned by Senior Scouts.

  20. Journeys

    While badges show the world you've learned a new skill, Journey awards say, "I found a way to make a difference." During a Journey, Girl Scouts do hands-on activities, connect with experts, and take the lead on a Take Action project with their community. And once a Junior, Cadette, Senior, or Ambassador completes their Journey, they're ...

  21. PDF Where do I find them?

    a Journey. Add them to your Journey, or complete them separately! DIGITAL DOWNLOAD Option to purchase an electronic version of badge requirements. JOURNEY BOOK (GIRL BOOK) Some journeys come with a special book for girls, with stories and activities related to the journey theme. JOURNEY ADULT GUIDE Guide for adults to lead girls through a journey.

  22. PDF Women's Health

    Badge Activity Set is designed to complement the Sow What? journey and be inserted into the badge section of The Girl's Guide to Girl Scouting for Seniors. Shop the GSOC Council Shop or www.girlscoutsoc.org to purchase Girl Scout Leadership Journeys, How to Guides, Journey Awards, The Girl's Guide to Girl Scouting, Badge Activity Sets and more.

  23. The state of AI in early 2024: Gen AI adoption spikes and starts to

    If 2023 was the year the world discovered generative AI (gen AI), 2024 is the year organizations truly began using—and deriving business value from—this new technology. In the latest McKinsey Global Survey on AI, 65 percent of respondents report that their organizations are regularly using gen AI, nearly double the percentage from our ...

  24. The state of AI in 2023: Generative AI's breakout year

    The latest annual McKinsey Global Survey on the current state of AI confirms the explosive growth of generative AI (gen AI) tools. Less than a year after many of these tools debuted, one-third of our survey respondents say their organizations are using gen AI regularly in at least one business function. Amid recent advances, AI has risen from a ...