Agile is a bit like building a LEGO set without following the instructions in the letter: instead, you have a picture of what you want to build, and so begin to assemble it section by section. You might begin with the car, then put up the house, and maybe return to add a garage for the car since it just occurred to you. Agile is a way of doing projects where you make little bits at a time, check if you’re going in the right direction, and make changes if you need to. It’s used a lot in making software, which is like the digital version of putting LEGOs together.

Imagine you’re making a new video game. In the old way of doing things, you would write down a big list of everything the game needs, spend months or even years making it, and finally show this finished product to players. But what if the players don’t find the game fun? Or what if they wanted a racing game and you made a puzzle game? In Agile, you would make a small part of the game at first–maybe only one level, perhaps only one kind of car. Then, you show it to some players, see what they think, and base your next move on their feedback. That way, you can be sure that you are making a game that people will really enjoy.

Let’s take a real-life example. Spotify is a company that streams music. Agile is used by Spotify to add new features to their app quickly and keep improving it over time. They break their work down into small parts, work on those parts for a few weeks, and then see what happens. This allows them to fix bugs quickly, add new features that users want, and ensure the app always runs well. It’s like you were continually improving your LEGO project. Based on what your friends think, add a new room to the house or a new feature car. Agile is also about working together well as a team. Instead of having one person decide everything, each of the team members contributes his or her ideas and decides how they would like to regulate their work together.

This way, they talk every day about what they’re doing, what problems they’re facing, and how they can help each other out. It’s like building LEGOs with friends: once in a while, you stop for a conversation about the best way to put in the next part, what parts somebody needs extra of, or who can help finish something that’s tricky. Schools can also use Agile. In school, when you are working on a major project such as a science fair or a class presentation, don’t do all your work at the last minute. Instead, break the project into smaller parts, and every week work on one part for feedback from your teacher or classmates. In this way, you can gradually improve and, by finishing, will have a very good result. It’s a way of painlessly making big tasks seem smaller and less fearful but also ensures that you are always heading in the right direction.

Working with Agile methodology can easily solve all types of projects, no matter if it’s software or LEGO. You can always achieve your creative goal by working together as a team. Technological advances and incremental improvement will perfect anything people produce. With Agile, people can produce higher quality products. They can also learn from their failures and ensure they are always progressing in life keeps getting worse all over If you write bugs for a living, it is best to fix more bugs and filler words, redundant phrases, or anything at all that you can find It’s a new way of tackling problems and making wonderful new things, one that is revolutionizing how we live and work.