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Share your first experiences of human-AI co-creation. Tell specific stories of when the AI surprised you, made a useful mistake, or helped you see something new.

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  • Practical first steps: how to post, how to contribute a pattern, how to find your people. Also where to ask for help navigating the forum.

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    Hi everyone, I’m Fabrizio, the person who started this forum. I’m exploring something called Pyragogy — the idea that learning in the AI age may look less like instruction and more like a cognitive dance between humans and machines. I’m not an academic. I’m just someone fascinated by how knowledge emerges when people and AI think together. Right now I’m experimenting with AI agents, learning systems, and collaborative knowledge spaces. If you’re here, I’m curious: What was your first moment where AI made you think differently about learning?
  • Post a genuine question about Pyragogy or human-AI collaboration that you’re genuinely curious about right now—not a request for explanation, but an invitation to explore together.

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    A few quick answers to common questions about Pyragogy and this community. What is Pyragogy? Pyragogy is an exploration of how learning changes when humans and AI think together. It builds on the idea of Peeragogy, a framework where people learn from each other as peers rather than from a central authority. Pyragogy asks a new question: What happens when some of those peers are AI systems? The goal is not to replace human learning, but to explore a new form of collaboration between different kinds of minds. Is Pyragogy a formal theory? Not yet. Pyragogy is an open experiment. Ideas are tested through conversations, projects, and experiments shared by the community. Think of it as a living framework, not a finished doctrine. Do I need technical knowledge to participate? No. Some discussions involve AI tools or experiments, but many conversations are about: • learning • collaboration • creativity • knowledge sharing Curiosity is more important than expertise. Is Pyragogy about AI replacing teachers? No. Pyragogy is not about replacing teachers or experts. It explores how learning ecosystems change when AI becomes a participant in the process, alongside humans. Human communities remain central. Who started Pyragogy? Pyragogy was initiated by members of the Peeragogy community and independent researchers exploring new forms of learning in the AI age. This forum is one of the spaces where the idea is being explored and developed. What can I do here? You can: • introduce yourself • ask questions • share experiments with AI • discuss learning methods • collaborate on ideas and projects The forum works best when people contribute their own experiences and reflections. Is Pyragogy connected to the Peeragogy Handbook? Yes. Pyragogy grows out of the ideas and practices developed in the Peeragogy Handbook, which explores peer-to-peer learning communities. Pyragogy extends that exploration into the AI era. Can I challenge the ideas here? Absolutely. Disagreement and critical thinking are welcome. Pyragogy is not a belief system — it is a collective exploration. Where should I start? If you’re new here: Introduce yourself in the introduction thread Browse the Agora discussions Share a question or idea Small contributions often lead to the most interesting conversations.
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    Online forums can easily become quiet places where people read but rarely speak. We want the opposite. Pyragogy works when people think together, not when a few people publish finished ideas and everyone else watches. Here are a few simple ways to participate meaningfully in this community. 1. Share unfinished ideas You don’t need a perfect theory or polished article. Often the most interesting discussions begin with something like: “I’ve been thinking about this… but I’m not sure if it makes sense.” Post the idea anyway. Exploration is the point. 2. Ask real questions Questions are the engine of good conversations. Instead of posting statements, try asking things like: • What surprised you while working with AI? • What learning method actually worked for you? • Where do current AI tools fail you? Real curiosity creates real dialogue. 3. Respond to other people A community grows when people respond to each other. If someone posts an idea: • add an example • challenge it • connect it to something else Even a short reply can move a conversation forward. 4. Share experiments Pyragogy is not only about ideas. It’s about experiments. You can share: • prompts that worked • tools you’re testing • strange results you discovered • failures that taught you something Failures are welcome here. They are often the most valuable posts. 5. Be constructive Disagreement is healthy. But the goal is not to win arguments. The goal is to see something new together. So challenge ideas — not people. A simple rule If a post makes someone think differently for a moment, it was worth writing. Welcome to the cognitive dance.