Good Morning and
Happy Friday!
Reimbursement for
Leave Upon Retirement- Per Board Policy, DEC (LOCAL), a
professional or paraprofessional employee who retires from the District shall
be eligible for reimbursement for local leave under the following conditions:
1.
The employee’s retirement is voluntary,
i.e., the employee is not being discharged or nonrenewed.
2.
The employee provides advance written
notice of intent to retire. Contract employees must provide written notice at
least 90 days by February 1. Non-contract employees must provide written notice
at least two weeks before the last day of employment.
3.
The employee has at least five years of
continuous service with the District.
4.
The employee retires under the rules of
TRS at the time of separation from the District.
The employee shall be reimbursed for
each day of local leave, to a maximum of 50 days, less any days used in the
previous two years, at a rate established by the Board. If the employee is
reemployed with the District, days for which the employee received payment
shall not be available to that employee.
The rate established by the Board shall
be in effect until the Board adopts a new rate. Any changes to the rate shall
apply beginning with the school year following the adoption of the rate change.
Stadium Update- Additional
testing has been conducted this week. We expect to learn the results in a
couple of weeks. A “Plan B” is being
developed should the situation require us to alter our previous plans to
remodel the home side.
AG Project Center
Update- Final plans and costs are being completed. We anticipate beginning dirt work in approximately
three weeks.
Young County Stock
Show Results- Congratulations to the students listed below for their
achievement at the Young County Livestock Show.
Rabbits
Garrett
Box-3rd place
Goat
Show
Becca
Burgess-Junior Showmanship Winner
Sheep
Show
Matthew
Clayton-Reserve Grand Champion
Philip
Rice-2nd place junior showmanship
Swine
Show
Reserve
Duroc-Jordan Crago
Champion
White Other Purebred-Sadie Walls
Reserve
Champion White OPB-Jordan Dodson
Champion
Black Other Purebred-Kegan Dowdy
Reserve
Champion Black Other Purebred-Jackson Osborne
Champion
Spot-Cade Anderson
Champion
Hamp-Tyler Walls
Reserve
Champion Hamp-Creed Jordan
Reserve
Champion York-Hayden Leach
Grand
Champion-Creed Jordan
Reserve
Grand Champion-Garrison Stovall
2nd place
Junior Showmanship-Cade Anderson
3rd place
Junior Showmanship-Boston Brewer
2nd place
Senior Showmanship-Caleb Crago
3rd place
Senior Showmanship-Jordan Crago
Steer
Show
Grand Champion-Jade
Jordan
Reserve
Grand Champion-Tanner Walls
Champion
British-Ben Burgess
Junior
Showmanship-Ashtyn Reese
Commercial
Steer
Grand
Champion-Kolton Gough
Steers and Lady Blues
Basketball- Good luck to the Freshman, JV & Varsity teams competing at
home this evening versus Stephenville.
Flipping the Switch
Sometime ago, I read QBQ-
The Question Behind The Question by John G. Miller. Just recently I read
the companion book- Flipping the Switch. Both are quick reads designed with the
purpose of self-reflection and unleashing one’s power of personal
accountability.
In Flipping the Switch,
Miller compares the process of framing the questions we ask ourselves to
our action of flipping on a light switch.
Both processes create the initial flow of energy. Self-reflective questioning from the lens of
personal accountability leads to personal learning, taking ownership, acting
creatively and being of service to others.
Conversely, questions focused on the actions of others leads to blaming,
complaining and thinking like a victim.
When challenged or frustrated, ones natural reaction is to
develop questions focused on the actions of others such as:
Why is this happening
to me?
When will others do
things right?
Reframing the question can turn the attention back to us and
lead to personal empowerment.
What can I do?
How can I contribute?
Miller offers three simple guidelines to construct questions
that lead to personal accountability and personal empowerment.
- Begin questions with “What” or “How” instead of “Why,” “When” or “Who.” Why questions tend to lead to complaining. When questions can lead to procrastination. Who questions lead to blaming.
- Include the word “I,” not “They,” “Them” or “You.” Avoid “We” as I can change only “Me.”
- Focus questions on action.
During our daily lives, we have several opportunities to take
charge of how we frame our questioning. This
may just be the essential first step to “flipping the switch” for better work
and home life!
Hope you have a blessed day!
Corny Joke of the Day:
What word is always spelled wrong in a dictionary?
Answer: Wrong
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