Live webinars with a clear outcome and a practical follow-up
Webinars at lumionyx are instructor-led sessions (typically 75 minutes) focused on one topic you can apply immediately. Each event includes a structured agenda, a short framework you can reuse, and time for Q&A. If you want the next dates or the registration steps, request details below and we will reply with the current schedule.
- A reusable study routine template and a checkpoint structure.
- A short rubric to evaluate whether a habit is working.
- Live Q&A to tailor the routine to your schedule.
Upcoming webinars (2026)
These sessions are designed as compact, topic-specific events. Each webinar has a clear scope, a short follow-up plan, and a Q&A segment. If you want availability and purchase steps, use the contact form below.
| Date | Webinar | Format | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Feb 18, 2026 |
Learning Systems That Stick
A study-design session using spaced repetition and retrieval practice, with a weekly routine you can reuse.
|
Live session + Q&A | 75 min |
| Mar 05, 2026 |
Practical English: Clear Emails and Updates
Sentence order, tone control, and a compact template library. Includes a correction rubric you can keep.
|
Live session + practice prompts | 75 min |
| Apr 16, 2026 |
Applied AI: Evaluation Checklists for Better Outputs
How to pressure-test AI output with a simple checklist, including citation habits and a “red team” pass.
|
Live session + examples | 75 min |
| May 14, 2026 |
Coding Fundamentals: Debugging and Naming That Scale
A compact debugging workflow and naming conventions that make small projects easier to maintain.
|
Live session + guided exercises | 75 min |
Fixed dates, clear scope
Each webinar has one topic with a defined boundary. That keeps the session focused and makes it easier to apply on the next working day.
Q&A with constraints
Questions are handled with examples and boundaries. If a question needs a longer path, we suggest a course track instead of improvising.
Follow-up plan
You leave with a small routine: a checklist, a template, or a practice sequence. The goal is repeatability, not a one-time insight.
Responsible AI handling
In AI webinars, exercises avoid sensitive personal data. We emphasize safe prompt hygiene and verification steps for uncertain outputs.
How webinar enrollment works
The process stays lightweight: you request details, we confirm availability, and you receive the final confirmation steps. No pop-ups, no artificial urgency, and no confusing “trial” pages.
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01
Request the webinar list
Use the form to ask for the nearest dates, agenda, and what is included. Include your topic (language, AI, coding) and availability.
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02
Confirm topic and seat
We reply with available dates and confirmation steps. If a session is not a good fit, we suggest a short course cohort instead.
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03
Attend the live session
The session runs 75 minutes with a defined agenda. The final segment is reserved for Q&A and practical examples.
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04
Run the follow-up routine
You apply the checklist or template introduced in the webinar. The goal is a repeatable habit, not a one-off note.
Request webinar registration and purchase details
Tell us which webinar topic you want, and your preferred dates. We will respond with the nearest schedule, availability, and the confirmation steps. We do not sell your data.
Want a calendar invite for the next webinar?
Request the latest dates and topics. We will send the schedule and the confirmation steps so you can decide with full clarity.
What participants typically take away
Webinars work best when the outcome is a small, specific routine. Below are grounded examples of what participants reported implementing after a single session.
Mini case: English email clarity in one week
Problem: short updates were taking too long to edit, with inconsistent tone. Approach: a webinar framework plus a two-part checklist (sentence order + tone markers). Outcome: within the next week, the participant drafted five emails using the template and reduced rewrites by keeping the checklist next to the draft.
Mini case: AI summaries with a verification pass
Problem: AI-generated summaries looked polished but occasionally missed important qualifiers. Approach: an evaluation checklist with a “citation required” step and a red-team question list. Outcome: the participant added a two-minute verification pass before sharing notes, which made the workflow more dependable.
“The webinar did not try to cover everything. One checklist, three examples, then Q&A. I left with a routine I could actually run the next morning without building a whole system.”
“I liked that the instructor named the constraints: where the method works, and where it does not. The follow-up plan was simple and didn’t require extra tools.”
“The coding webinar was short and practical: one debugging loop and naming rules that made my small project less chaotic. I used the loop the same day.”
Educational disclosures