Giving Thanks! – #Engage109

“Efforts and courage are not enough without purpose and direction.”
– President John F. Kennedy

Happy-Thanksgiving-1

As we prepare to give thanks with our families and friends, it’s a nice time to reflect professionally on the great and multiple reasons for which we give thanks as well!

From a letter I sent to the Deerfield Public Schools District 109 Community earlier this week:

Dear District 109 Staff, Parents, Grandparents and Community Members, …

I give thanks that our excellent teachers work in partnership with involved parents to allow students to reach their fullest academic potential and, more importantly, to create a community of caring, respect, trustworthiness, and integrity. Together, we are creating a high-achieving and highly caring educational environment that is a model for other communities to follow.

I’m thankful for our ability to connect with our community, and that you share your thoughts and provide valuable input so willingly with us. Your feedback and ideas are critical in our continuous improvement. When we launched the District 109 mobile app earlier this year, we included an icon for the “Your Voice” survey, a quick one- or two-question survey on important topics. The first survey asked the greatest area of concern for students in District 109. Responses came in from parents, students, staff and community members. The results show that the social-emotional well being of students is at the top of the list…

Your Voice Again
We’ve just opened a new Your Voice survey, so please visit the District 109 mobile app, swipe to the second page, and click on the Your Voice icon. Then, answer our quick question to share your opinion on computer coding. We’ll share those results in the coming months, and let you know if we’re taking any action based on your input…. ‘


We are grateful that we work in the DPS109 community, there are so many reasons why, including (but not limited to the following):

  • We are thankful for a Board of Education who act as a Governance Team,

    ENGAGE, INSPIRE, EMPOWER

    ENGAGE, INSPIRE, EMPOWER

  • We are thankful for a Leadership team who seek continuous improvement,
  • We are thankful for a teaching and support staff community who love children, education, and success,
  • We are thankful for the finest students in the world,
  • We are thankful for a community who supports education and the future with critical review and direct communication,
  • We are grateful to live in a free society where free expression is celebrated! Thank you so much for allowing us the privilege to

 

 

Engage, Inspire, Empower our students, one another, our community –

each and every day!

From the US Secy Ed – Anti Bullying Resources

Don’t run from a challenge. Instead run toward it because the only way to escape fear is to trample it beneath your feet.”
– Nadia Comaneci

In the Deerfield Public Schools District 109 we are sensitive to the needs of the whole child – social, emotional, wellness, etc. We strive to impact our students, staff, and community in as positive manner as possible. In addition to the consistent and rigorous curriculum, instruction, and assessment expectations, we also hold mental health needs at the highest levels of importance and focus. In this post I’m sharing a letter that the United States Interim Secretary of Education, Dr. John King, recently shared with educators across the country:

Information and Resources on Harassment and Bullying

Dear Partners:

“…[On November 18, 2016] the Education Department joined an event at the White House to both reflect on the Obama Administration’s ongoing efforts to advance diversity and inclusion as well as explore the ways in which we may continue to further those efforts together.  [This] event builds on a number of ongoing efforts.

Last winter, I joined with former Secretary Arne Duncan to release a joint letter which issued a call to action and provided a list of resources designed to help ensure that our schools and institutions are places where all students feel safe and welcome.  As we are releasing a new report … entitled “Advancing Diversity & Inclusion in Higher Education,” we also wanted to share with you again the information and resources contained in that joint letter.

In particular, I want to highlight those resources that are included in the Addendum to the letter for your use as we continue to work together to ensure that all schools and institutions are environments conducive to learning.

Thank you for your continued partnership in this work and for your continued leadership in supporting all of our students.

John B. King, Jr.
Secretary

U.S. Department of Education

 

Illinois 5Essentials PARENT Survey – a letter to my community #Engage109

“Determine never to be idle. No person will have occasion to complain of the want of time, who never loses any. It is wonderful how much may be done, if we are always doing.” – Thomas Jefferson


Every other year the state of Illinois asks school districts to survey students, teachers, and parents to complete a statewide climate survey called the 5Essentials from the University of Chicago. As part of our continuing efforts to get input and learn in what areas we succeed and in what areas we need improvement, we ask every member of our school community to complete the surveys.

From a letter I sent:

“Beginning November 16, students, teachers and parents across Illinois will have an opportunity to participate in the fourth annual statewide Illinois 5Essentials Survey. …This year, District 109 is participating, and asking parents to share their thoughts on the important elements of school effectiveness.

Please click here to take the survey.

If you have children in more than one school, please take the survey for each school. The survey will take less than 10 minutes to complete. Your participation will help the District understand the conditions at your child’s school and guide improvement. Your identity and survey responses will be kept completely confidential and will never be connected to you or your child.

On behalf of the Illinois State Board of Education, the Illinois 5Essentials Survey is administered by UChicago Impact at the University of Chicago. The survey gathers data related to five indicators that can predict important student outcomes, including improved attendance and larger test score gains.

  • Effective Leaders
  • Collaborative Teachers
  • Involved Families
  • Supportive Environments
  • Ambitious Instruction

Prior research in more than 400 schools has shown that schools that were strong on at least three of these “5Essential” indicators were 10 times more likely to improve student learning gains in math and reading than those that were weak on three or more Essentials.

All teachers and 6th through 12th grade students will be responding to this survey. 5Essentials Reports will be generated for schools if their teachers and/or students meet the response rate threshold of 50 percent. These reports will be sent to schools and districts in March 2017 and will also be included in the State School Report Card. If at least 20 percent of parents complete this survey, a parent supplement will also be generated. The parent data will not be reported on the State Report Card.

The Illinois 5Essentials Survey for parents will be conducted November 16 through January 16, 2017. Thank you so much for giving your valuable time and input. We are listening!

Sincerely,

Mike

Michael Lubelfeld, Ed.D.
Superintendent of Schools
Deerfield Public Schools District 109
517 Deerfield Road  |  Deerfield, IL 60015
(847) 945-1844 x7231
http://www.dps109.org | http://dps109supt.edublogs.org/


Text-a-Tip: 24/7 anonymous support for students who need help for themselves or a friend. Text 224HELP to 274637 to connect with a trained counselor.

#ASuperDay – Sharing the story of education through the superintendent lens

 

“One of the marks of successful people is that they are action-oriented. One of the marks of average people is that they are talk-oriented.”
– Brian Tracy

 

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From time to time I share “tweets” from superintendents and school leaders around the world on “ASuperDay” – a super day is designed to give school leaders the chance to tell the stories of what education is … using pictures, audio, video, and text superintendents share “real life” views of meetings, classroom visits, etc. The superintendent position is no longer lonely – or at least it should not be lonely – when we band together as a “PLN” (Personal/Professional learning network) and we take a few minutes to share what it is that we do and what it is that we share.

In the Deerfield Public Schools District 109 our motto is Engage, Inspire, Empower,

ENGAGE, INSPIRE, EMPOWER

ENGAGE, INSPIRE, EMPOWER

through venues like #ASuperDay on Twitter, we’re able to join so many others in so many places doing just that – engaging, inspiring and empowering.

The narrative of education is in the hands of the leaders … please take some time to check out #ASuperDay on Twitter – November 16, 2016
 

Social Emotional Focus – #ENGAGE109 – Botvin Life Skills

“If I were to wish for anything, I should not wish for wealth and power, but for the passionate sense of potential, for the eye which, every young and aredent, sees the possible.  Pleasure disappoints; possibility never.”
– Soren Kierkegaard, Danish philosopher

In the Deerfield Public Schools, District 109, our aim is to educate the whole child. This year two of our schools, South Park (Safe Whole Child School) and Kipling (Engaged Whole Child School) were recognized for excellence in educating the whole child from the Illinois Association for Supervision & Curriculum Development (IASCD). Our view of the whole child is demonstrated in our measurement of multiple metrics (including but not limited to the list below):

  • Engagement of students
  • Academic performance of students
  • Organizational culture of staff
  • Climate perceptions from stakeholders
  • Impact of Technology and Innovative Instruction from parents, students, and staff

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Current efforts on mental health, drug abuse resistance, addiction, decision making, life skills, prevention, safety, anti-bullying, etc. are in place using evidence based programming, including our recent implementation of the Botvin Life Skills Program.

 

This year we are implementing parent training/education starting after the first of the year; our mission Engage, Inspire, Empower focuses on students, staff, parctadents, and the entire community. Our efforts are not in isolation, we are in partnership with a local Drug Free Community Grant coalition, Community the Anti Drug. CTAD is leading and coordinating the efforts of our villages/cities, school districts, police departments, clergy, media, treatment providers, students, teachers, and more. Through this partnership as well as the partnership with the Jordan Michael Filler Foundation, we are able to provide mental health evidence based, proven instruction to our students across the communities the coalition represents.


 

This week the Wall Street Journal ran two articles about our efforts

(sharing below):

Schools Step Up Efforts to Fight Opioid Abuse

Measures include enlisting pharmacists, counseling and prevention programs

Many U.S. schools are launching more aggressive campaigns to prevent opioid abuse among students as evidence mounts of a growing problem. Gilbert Botvin, developer of the Botvin LifeSkills program, which teaches children the proper way to use prescription drugs, joins Lunch Break. Photo: CVS Health

Many U.S. schools are ramping up campaigns to prevent opioid abuse among students as evidence mounts of a growing problem.

Some are inviting pharmacists to schools to convey the dangers of prescription pills. Others are offering emergency counseling via text message. In some regions, schools are teaching a substance-abuse-prevention program developed at Cornell University to students as young as fourth grade.

The widening crisis of addiction to heroin, prescription painkillers and other opioids “has been very scary, very serious,” says Michael Lubelfeld, superintendent of an elementary- and middle-school district in Deerfield, Ill. “We want to do everything as a community to start addressing it at age 10, 11, 12, so when they are 23 they aren’t going to be addicted.”

 The rate of U.S. children hospitalized for prescription-opioid overdoses more than doubled over a 16-year period ending in 2012, according to a study in JAMA Pediatrics last month. Particularly at risk were 1- to 4-year-olds, who most likely swallowed their parents’ medications, and older teens who abused the drugs or attempted suicide, the researchers said.

Hospitalizations for heroin overdoses among teens 15 to 19 nearly tripled over the same period, from 0.96 to 2.51 per 100,000 teens, the study showed.

The roots of the crisis lie in widespread prescribing of painkillers that created a generation of opioid addicts among adults and children, public health experts say.

Because opioid addiction often begins with misuse of prescription painkillers, CVS HealthCorp. last year started sending pharmacists to schools to warn about the dangers. The pharmacists gave nearly 3,000 presentations in 40 states in the 2015-16 school year.

Kayla Mays, a CVS pharmacist who has given presentations in Atlanta-area schools, says she rattles off a list of generic and brand-name prescription painkillers—Lortab, Norco, OxyContin, fentanyl and others—and asks kids to raise their hands if they have heard of them. “There is a lot of giggling around names like Percocet or OxyContin,” she says, “because those drugs are mentioned in a lot of pop songs.”

But the mood turns serious when Ms. Mays plays a video describing the downward spiral of four teens who got hooked on prescription medication, she says. Drug overdoses killed one of the students and paralyzed another; two others made it into rehab. “The video really demonstrates this can happen to anybody—good kids, athletes, anybody,” Ms. Mays says.

CVS this summer paid $3.5 million to settle federal allegations that 50 of its pharmacies in Massachusetts and New Hampshire filled forged prescriptions for painkillers and other controlled substances. The company says it has “implemented enhanced policies” to help its pharmacists “determine whether a controlled substance prescription was issued for a legitimate medical purpose.”

In the suburbs north of Chicago and east of Los Angeles, some schools are trying a new texting tool that connects kids to a counselor within minutes. Kids send their questions anonymously—the system hides their phone numbers—and can use the service to seek help for themselves or a friend, says Andy Duran, executive director of Linking Efforts Against Drugs, or LEAD, a nonprofit in Lake Forest, Ill., that developed the tool, called Text a Tip.

Licensed therapists are on-call round the clock to respond. “We have had kids text at a party and say, ‘There are kids using around me and I don’t know what to do.’ So we respond and say, ‘Can you distract yourself, can you leave, can you call a friend or adult to pick you up?’” says Dana Slowinski, who oversees the therapist team. “Because what we find is, in the moment kids are not thinking through their options.”

More than 100 school districts in Illinois and California are using Text a Tip. To cover the program’s costs, LEAD charges each district about $7,500 a year for the service, plus a per-student fee of about 49 cents.

We want to do everything as a community to start addressing it at age 10, 11, 12, so when they are 23 they aren’t going to be addicted.

—Michael Lubelfeld, superintendent of an elementary- and middle-school district in Deerfield, Ill.

The Jordan Michael Filler Foundation, established by the family of a young man who died of a heroin overdose in 2014, helped finance the cost of the texting service for eight schools in Highland Park and Deerfield, Ill. The foundation also helped fund a substance-abuse-prevention program, called Botvin LifeSkills Training, in the schools.

Botvin LifeSkills was developed by Gilbert Botvin, a professor emeritus at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York. Conducted in as many as 15 sessions over several weeks, the program teaches kids the traits they need to resist pressure to abuse substances, including self-esteem and strong problem-solving and decision-making skills.

One study in middle-school children in Iowa and Pennsylvania found that use of the Botvin program “significantly reduced” the chances of students taking prescription opioids for nonmedical purposes by grade 12, compared with a control group that didn’t receive the training, according to results published in 2014 in the journal Preventive Medicine.

Julie Filler, the mother of the young man who died, said it took a while to convince some of the schools to accept the help. “The communities don’t want to talk about it because they want people to buy houses here,” she says of drug addiction.

Write to Jeanne Whalen at jeanne.whalen@wsj.com

2nd article:Putting Addiction-Prevention Program Into Action

School relies on role-playing, class discussion to help students make good decisions

Gilbert Botvin, a professor emeritus at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, developed the Botvin LifeSkills Training substance-abuse-prevention program.
Gilbert Botvin, a professor emeritus at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, developed the Botvin LifeSkills Training substance-abuse-prevention program. PHOTO: WEILL CORNELL MEDICINE

At South Park Elementary School in Deerfield, Ill., teaching kids to resist drugs, alcohol and cigarettes involves a lot of role-playing and class discussion.

The school, like others in District 109, uses Botvin LifeSkills Training, a program designed to help kids resist peer pressure and make good decisions.

In a recent lesson on assertiveness, fifth-grade teacher Faith Keidan says she first defined the difference between passive, aggressive and assertive responses, and then asked students to role-play them. The scenario: responding to a sibling who borrowed a videogame without asking.

Then she explained why being assertive is a good thing: because it helps people know what to say to get out of bad situations.

In another lesson on resisting cigarettes and marijuana, the kids discussed the economic history of tobacco and how it gained acceptance by being a big part of the economy. She also asked students to suggest five laws that would decrease tobacco use.

Joanna Klopfer, assistant director for student services in the district, says it tested the Botvin program in its fifth-grade classes before extending it to fourth and sixth grades, with plans for seventh and eighth grade down the road.

Write to Jeanne Whalen at jeanne.whalen@wsj.com

Celebrating Education – #AEW2016 – American Education Week

“I swing big, with everything I’ve got, I hit big or I miss big. I like to live as big as I can.”
– Babe Ruth

Celebrating American Education Week!

November 14-18, 2016

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What is American Education Week?

American Education Week—November 14-18, 2016—will present all Americans with a wonderful opportunity to celebrate public education and honor individuals who are making a difference in ensuring that every child receives a quality education.

2016’s theme, “Great Public Schools: A Basic Right and Our Responsibility,” was reflected in special observances each day of the 2016 weeklong celebration:

  • Monday, November 14, 2016: Kickoff Day
  • Tuesday, November 15, 2016: Parents Day
  • Wednesday, November 16, 2016: Education Support Professionals Day
  • Thursday, November 17, 2016: Educator for a Day
  • Friday, November 18, 2016: Substitute Educators Day

Read more about the history of American Education Week.


 

In the Deerfield Public Schools District 109 we like to honor, celebrate, and encourage all members of the district, teachers, support staff, administrators, board members, students, parents, business partners, etc. It’s nice to have formal days/weeks like the American Education Week because we also get an additional excuse to say Thank you!

ENGAGE, INSPIRE, EMPOWER

ENGAGE, INSPIRE, EMPOWER

We are proud to “brand” and “tell our stories” every day through multiple media sources including Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIN; we are especially proud to share via the district hashtag: #Engage109 The stories of excellence are found in the classrooms, training rooms, boar rooms, and all over our community.

We have been in “business” since 1847 and we have no plans to stop providing world class educational opportunities for all children. Our award winning schools, teachers, administrators, learning spaces, and district continue to inspire us to work harder, lead stronger, and excel in every way possible.

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This week we will give each and every employee a “high five” as a thank you and as our continued gratitude and appreciation for the selfless, innovative, and engaging work they provide for children every day! Horace Mann is credited with stating:

Education then, beyond all other devices of human origin, is the great equalizer of the conditions of men, the balance-wheel of the social machinery.

In our school system we are focused on meeting the needs of all children and making certain that all children deserve and are capable of an education that is meaningful, engaging, relevant, and purposeful.

Please join us in saying THANK YOU to our educators during

American Education Week.

Engage, Inspire, Empower

Also this week:

From a good friend and co-worker:

“Ironically, while we celebrate another year of life for [my husband], the world prepares to celebrate World Pancreatic Cancer Day, which will take place next week on November 17th. In celebration of [his] inspiring battle with cancer, please consider supporting an organization that funds research for Pancreatic Cancer. Contributions from these organizations played a major role in funding research that led to [his] treatment. Imagine a day when pancreatic cancer is detected early enough that survival rates improve dramatically.” 

Veteran’s Day – Honoring our Liberty – #Engage109

“Do what you can, where you are, with what you have.”
– Theodore Roosevelt

veterans-remembrance-day-quotes

Tomorrow we set aside time to honor our nation’s veterans for service above self and for selfless service in support of our freedom and liberty! We are a free people in a land devoted to liberty and justice for all, a land where the peaceful transition of power has been the norm and not the exception, and a land where being from somewhere else is expected, not questioned. Those who have served and fought for our freedom are heroes in whose memory we offer gratitude and thanks. As a third generation American and a son, nephew, son-in-law, cousin, friend, and neighbor and co-worker to veterans, I say THANK YOU! My wife and I named our son for one of my uncle’s who served our country for decades and who, along with my aunt, is interned at the Arlington National veterans-day-quotesCemetery. Veteran’s Day is a special time for reflection, thanks, gratitude and honor – it is a personally important day for me and my family.

From: Information about Veteran’s Day

Veterans Day is an official United States holiday which honors people who have served in armed service also known as veterans. It is a federal holiday that is observed on November 11.

The precursor of Veterans Day was Armistice Day, proclaimed by U.S. President Woodrow Wilson for November 11, 1919, to honor those members of the armed forces who were killed during war World War I. The date of 11th November was chosen to commemorate the armistice signed between the Allies of World War I and Germany at Compiègne, France, for the cessation of hostilities on the Western veterans-day-quotes-4Front of World War I. An Act (52 Stat. 351; 5 U. S. Code, Sec. 87a) approved May 13, 1938, made the 11th of November in each year a legal holiday — a day to be dedicated to the cause of world peace and to be thereafter celebrated and known as “Armistice Day.”

In 1954, after World War II and after American forces had fought aggression in Korea the Congress amended the Act of 1938 by striking out the word “Armistice” and inserting in its place the word “Veterans.” With the approval of this legislation (Public Law 380) on June 1, 1954, November 11th became a day to honor American veterans of all wars.

Veterans Day is not to be confused with Memorial Day. Veterans Day celebrates the service of all U.S. military veterans, while Memorial Day is a day of remembering the men and women who died while serving.

On Veteran’s Day, as you are in school, at work, on a day off, serving others, please take a few moments

Retired Senior Master Sgt. Billy Neil poses near a quote by President Harry Truman at the National World War II Memorial during Hero Flight 2007 in Washington, D.C., Sept. 15. Hero Flight is an all-volunteer program that sets up trips to allow as many World War II veterans as possible to visit the National World War II Memorial. (U.S. Air Force photo/Staff Sgt. Suzanne Day)

to think about the sacrifices so many have made that we can be free. Think about the millions of our countrymen and countrywomen who have fought tyranny and evil so that we can be free to read, write, think, speak, practice religion, vote, travel, and so many other freedoms we may take for granted from time to time. Think about our incredible Constitution and democracy and how we are able to freely select representatives for the government. Please be sure to always thank a veteran, thank a member of the armed and civil services and remember that we are so very fortunate to live in the land of the free and the home of the brave!!

Lone Star State History -Reflections on Change- Leadership Lessons #SSSAustin2016

Why change when you have been so successful? Think about Blockbuster and Borders … change or – well – you know! – Mike Lubelfeld (via Tweet on 11/5/2016) – (challenge for most people is justifying change – especially in high performing venues)

img_0273I just attended the 52nd annual national conference of the Suburban School Superintendents. Inspired leadership lessons from experts like George Couros, Carl Hooker, Hall Davidson, and others helped my colleagues and I frame, reframe, affirm, reject, think, and plan on many levels. The conference was held in the state capital of Texas – Austin, Texas. Austin is an amazing venue and it formed a powerful backdrop for our journey into innovative and meaningful leadership.

In this blog post I am (hopefully) drawing connections between the rich and diverse history of Texas with the need (in my opinion) for structural changes to public schooling and for innovative instructional practices to become the norm and not the exception. In addition, I am a strong advocate for meeting the needs of ALL learners through integrated practices and not through segregationistic practices that plague CScRi5IWsAAIIv8our school systems at present. The school system we have was built in 1893; just as I do not think Texas should leave our union and become an independent nation (as it was from 1836-1845) I do not think we should remain stuck in a 19th Century mentality with respect to how we “do” school.

file_004-1Texas has a rich and varied history. The image at the left shows the six flags that have flown over Texas since 1519. The flags of Mexico, France, Spain, The Confederate States of America, the Republic of Texas, and the United States of America.

Texas has undergone many changes and innovations in its long and storied history. As times and circumstances changed, so did Texas. As part/parts of two kingdoms, two republics and as an independent nation, Texas has re-iterated, re-designed, transformed, and remained proud, powerful, and unique.

As times and circumstances changed and as technology and technological progress impacted governance and structure for Texas, I wonder why the governance and structure of our nation’s public schools still remain rooted to what many, including myself, consider to be an outdated factory model.

It’s no longer relevant for Texas to be an independent nation (in my opinion) as its place in the USA is what is now just and right for our time. But in the past it was relevant for the Texans to exist as a separate nation. Just like the fact that we no longer use check imprint machines like the one shown (from the old Texas Treasury office) I wonder why we still “do” education in an outdated 19th Century factory model.

file_005Just like technology, progress, and innovation caused us to print and perforate checks more efficiently with technology, and just like the technology, progress, and innovation caused Texas to iterate through six nations, so too, I believe the time is now for education to progress and innovate into new and better structures of organization and implementation.

I often write about personalized learning (which I acknowledge has many interpretations) and meeting the needs of all learners. I study, read, research, reflect, learn and lead based upon the evidence of others’ experiences and work as well as my own experience and work. One of the most read blog posts based on readership statistics, that I ever wrote was about John Hattie’s research findings and the impact of strategies, structures, and practices in education. Often I ask the question “If we know what works, why aren’t we universally doing what works?”

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Based on these readership stats I can conclude or infer that there is interest in the meta analyses and their implications for change and review of schooling. Just as the Battle of San Jacinto, where Sam Houston and his Texan forces defeated the Mexican general Santa Anna and declared independence from Mexico in 1836, the past few years in education have felt like a revolution of sorts.

With so many school districts “going one to one” and infusing technology and technological tools into instruction. The modern realities of progress and change are becoming normal. In addition, with groups like Education Reimagined, change efforts are about to become as normal in our present as fixed rows and desks in the teacher centered design from the 19th Century have been from our past.

The past few years have seen change and change thinking as the norm, and with a major emphasis across the continent on classroom redesign efforts as well as films like Most Likely to Succeed and Beyond Measure challenging the practices of education, it feels in some ways similar to the 1830s when “change agents” like Sam Houston re-created changeimageTexas in a new frame by declaring independence and starting over anew. The Texans did not like the structures imposed upon them and they revolted. Of course I am NOT suggesting armed revolt as an ideal in the public school change process, I use this as an example of change from my recent visit to one of the most significant state capitols in the USA and the fascinating history of the Texan people. I apologize if this is too much of a stretch!

I welcome comments, challenges, affirmations of my ideas, rejection of my ideas, all thoughts are welcome. My charge is to lead and support leadership as the lead learner in the community where I am privledged to serve. Leadership is not doing what’s popular – it’s doing what’s right!

Thank goodness we have outstanding educators in the Deerfield Public Schools District 109 who challenge the process and model the way and who demonstrate the capacities to unlearn that which worked yesterday so that we can create tomorrow.

 

ENGAGE, INSPIRE, EMPOWER

ENGAGE, INSPIRE, EMPOWER

 

 

Below I’m sharing some additional images of the majestic Texas Capitol; if you visit Austin, I encourage you to visit and learn about the unique history of Texas.

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