I feel like I leaned a few things this semester, though not as many as the last one. Last semester was my first one as a Vivero Fellow and I did all of the basic trainings and so learned more in the most basic sense. This semester though, I learned some more nuanced things, like how to make pivot tables and more ways to work with pivot charts, as well as the new-to-me tool of StoryMap JS and the more specific skill of geocoding. In terms of giving my past self advice, I am not sure what all of the new things I have to add to what I’ve thought in the past but I think the main thing that I am realizing the importance of staying focused on individual things and to be in a mindset conducive towards learning. The trainings worked well for me, however I felt like the reflections I did as a returning fellow on tools I was going back to, which I did my best on, were a bit unstructured and I was not sure if I was doing them right in the moment. There was little to report as not helpful or confusing aside from perhaps that. The documentation my project lead and I have created is a word document that mentions the OneDrive folder that contains our project materials, the basics of our work plan, which included listing the things we did but also how to understand an Excel document we made as part of the project. It also talks about why we made some of the decisions we did, or at least some of the considerations that factored into our judgement. The document still needs more detailed information about our initial motivations and goals for the project that we started out with, and it could benefit from information about what we took from our reading of The Souls of Black Folk and how that helped orient us. I am not totally sure what specific tools, scholarship topics, and methods I am interested in learning about next semester, but I know that I want to get a better sense of what is possible for my project. That might mean learning more about for example StoryMaps where we could host our project. In addition, I am for personal reasons interested in learning more about Excel, which I have already learned a lot about but which I know there is an immense amount to learn still based on how long the LinkedIn Learning tutorials about different parts of it are. I have not really thought about scholarly topics as something to explore but that also sounds interesting, I would just need to know more about what is out there.