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Updates from Organizations - Government agencies - Advertise Various Artists

Monday, January 29, 2018 - 10:45am

Debra Ross, Publisher, KidsOutAndAbout.com events@kidsoutandabout.com via mail138.sea81.mcsv.net 

6:04 AM (4 hours ago)

 

to me

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

January 29, 2018

Dear KidsOutAndAbout.com readers:

Enrollment for the 2018-2019 school year has begun, and if you've been looking for a curriculum that will challenge your child to become a self-reliant and productive, you must visit Challenger School. Challenger School offers preschool through eighth grade and operates 25 campuses, including six along the Wasatch Front. Challenger School’s results and methods set it apart from other schools.

Breathtaking Results
Challenger’s proven curriculum and teaching methods help students develop the skills needed to succeed in whatever they decide to pursue. As students learn foundational concepts and apply reasoning skills, the results are spectacular. On the 2017 Iowa Tests of Basic Skills (ITBS), Challenger students achieved average scores well above the 90th percentile.  The average percentile rank for Challenger kindergartners was 99.

Challenging Curriculum
Challenger School teaches reading, composition, math, history, and logic as essential bedrock subjects upon which literature, science, and other subjects naturally build. From preschool on, Challenger students regularly speak and perform before their peers, teachers, and parents. These repeated experiences help them gain the confidence necessary for effective public speaking. Challenger graduates point to these experiences as the basis for success in college and the workplace. Challenger’s curriculum and philosophy lead students to respect and protect the unalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness expressed so brilliantly by our Founding Fathers in the Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution.

Proven Methods
Students learn to identify and establish connections between ideas, and this linked structure of ideas—this understanding of an idea connected to other supporting ideas—gives students a deep and lasting understanding of the subject. Challenger's emphasis on independent reasoning results in their students’ extraordinary academic performance and their unique ability to essentialize what they learn and integrate and connect it with what they know.
 
Learn more at upcoming open houses:

  • Thursday, February 1, 2018 from 8 am – 6 pm
  • Friday, February 9, 2018 from 8 am – 6 pm
  • Monday, February 12, 2018 from 8 am – 6 pm
  • Saturday, February 24, 2018 from 9 am  –  2 pm
  • Tuesday, February 27, 2018  from 8 am – 6 pm
  • Wednesday, March 7, 2018  from 8 am – 6 pm

Open houses will be held at the following campuses: 

                    
Visit a campus to learn more, or see ChallengerSchool.com.

Sincerely,

Debra Ross
Publisher, KidsOutAndAbout.com
   ========================

Consider for a moment these sickening facts:

  • The national debt has eclipsed $20 trillion. And yet, the federal government took in more revenue in 2017 than any year in history -- over $3.4 trillion. That's YOUR money.
  • Americans spend more on taxes than they do on food, clothing, and housing combined!
  • In 2017, you spent more than 113 days of the year working just to pay the government.

Our government does not have a revenue problem, it has a spending problem.

Wasteful spending is just one of the many problems America is facing this year. I'd love to hear from you about how it compares in importance to things like securing our borders, repealing Obamacare, or promoting local control of education. 

Will you take just a couple of minutes to rank these issues in this brief survey? https://secure.heritageaction.com/heritage-action-2018-priorities-survey

Your feedback is helpful in allowing Heritage Action to make your voice heard.

=========================

The 3 Stages Of Evolution 

For Forward-Moving Entrepreneurs

 

Growing a business sometimes demands that the owner grow as well. The willingness and ability to evolve – in part by embracing change and creating it around them – is an important trait shared by successful entrepreneurs, experts say.

 

The trick is getting the employees to buy into the changes and evolve themselves. And if that’s accomplished, then comes the third part in an entrepreneur’s evolutionary cycle – fostering growth for the company’s clients.

 

“True entrepreneurism means not only evolving as a company, but also helping clients evolve as well,” says Peter J. Strauss (www.peterjstrauss.com), an attorney, captive insurance manager and author of The Business Owner’s Definitive Guide to Captive Insurance Companies. 

 

“Why would you not want to be the best version of yourself? Whether you’re talking about your own people in your company or your clients, there is this giant middle market that has no idea of their potential. They go to work each day just focused on what they do, but they don’t think about things that could help them better their businesses.”

 

Strauss reviews the three stages of entrepreneurial evolution, and how personal and team growth can inspire the same evolution within a client’s company:

 

• Self-admission. “It starts with the owner or CEO’s willingness to fully commit to evolving,” Strauss says. “You have to evolve as an individual before your organization can evolve. The company leader must admit they need help with some areas in order to stay relevant and keep growing.”  Fully exploring the options to seek knowledge and advice on the right direction are crucial. “Eventually you have to trust the guidance you’re getting,” Strauss says.

• Employee buy-in or push-back.  Here the tug-of-war with a company’s future often begins, Strauss says. “You need people on your team who have ambition to grow and want to be part of something bigger than their job definition or personal goals,” he says. “Individual rewards will come as the company prospers from the growth changes. But you do run the risk of losing your core group if they don’t believe in what you’re doing. Most people, even the ones who have been with you the longest, probably won’t like it because most people fear change. It’s a very dicey game to play, but it’s necessary and liberating once the process plays out. It’s classic pain before gain.”

• Applying in-house and to clients. Once the owner knows he has the right people in place, including new hires, he or she has the management team push through the changes. “It doesn’t mean there’s a new sheriff in town, but a new way that’s going to make our company and everybody with it better if they don’t fight it,” Strauss says. “Then you’re able to walk the walk with your clients when you’re helping them evolve. You can provide them with things they can’t build themselves because it’s outside their scope and focus.”

 

 “It’s important, when a business leader is evolving, to see others evolving around them,” Strauss says.  “We can do more for each other, and our clients ultimately can evolve like our business did.”

About Peter J. Strauss

Peter J. Strauss (www.peterjstrauss.com) is an attorney, captive insurance manager and author of several books, including most recently The Business Owner’s Definitive Guide to Captive Insurance Companies. He is the founder and managing member of The Strauss Law Firm, LLC, on Hilton Head Island, S.C, and also the founder and CEO of Hamilton Captive Management, LLC. A graduate of the New England School of Law, he holds an LL.M. in estate planning from the University of Miami and speaks regularly at public seminars.