If you are not following
@LYSNation on Twitter, then you missed the Top 10 LYS Tweets from the week of
November 26, 2017 when they were first posted.
And if you are on Twitter, you might want to check out the Tweeters who
made this week’s list.
1. Students should spend a large
portion of their day engaged in listening to, reading, thinking, talking, and
writing about texts. (By @ReadtobeReadyTN)
2. A student has to receive a
100% NINE times before fully recovering from a single zero. Zeroes are
disastrous to kids. (By @justintarte)
3. Don't defend what isn't
working. (By @Leadershipfreak)
4. We never had kids, but paying
for public education is my favorite tax. We even go to the bake sales. It's
called "good citizenship." I want the next generations educated for
the same reason I want clean air and water. As part of a community I want
what's best for all of us. (By @DCitizenBader)
5. A small team of passionate
learners always beats a large team of stagnant knowers. (By @Leadershipfreak)
6. Really interesting read -
"Schools reward students who consistently do what they are told - and life
rewards people who shake things up." (By @gcouros)
7. Shhhh, don’t tell: Students
will work beyond their grade level when they don’t know the work is beyond
their grade level. (By @edutopia)
8. Grateful for dedicated
pastors all over Texas who advocate bravely for the public education of ALL our
children! (By @pastors4txkids)
9. Pain is the point where
average starts to become remarkable. (By @Leadershipfreak)
10. Use the 21/90 Rule. It takes
21 days to build a habit and 90 days to build a lifestyle. (By @melrobbins)
Think.
Work. Achieve.
Your turn...
- Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “The Fundamental 5: The Formula for Quality Instruction.” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/Fundamental5
- Upcoming Conference Presentations: TASSP Assistant Principal Workshop (Keynote); NASSP National Principals Conference
- Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation and like Lead Your School on Facebook
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