Jeff Thredgold's Tea Leaf - 'A Parent's Letter to My Children in School'
07/20/2011 | 19 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

To my children and grandchildren…

With your focus on education, I often find myself thinking about how much the world has changed since I was in your shoes. The world is now a much “smaller” place—people of all cultures can communicate and travel with ease. You face great challenges today…just as I did…just as my parents before me. These words of advice might be helpful:

  • Recognize that the only limits you face are those you set for yourself
  • Be the BEST that you can be
  • Recognize that YOU are responsible for your successes and failures
  • You must earn your way
  • Strive for excellence…not perfection
  • See the glass as half-full, rather than seeing it as half-empty
  • Focus on positives, rather than on negatives
  • Look to praise, rather than to criticize
  • Look for ways to succeed, rather than excuses to fail
  • Commit yourself to constant improvement
  • Understand how important education is to success
  • School is the key.  Technology rules. You need better skills to succeed
  • Learn what is being taught, but most importantly, learn “how” to learn
  • Develop other information sources to verify, or challenge, what you are being taught. “History” is routinely twisted or rewritten to support a particular point of view. Get other ideas
  • Treat teachers, administrators, and fellow students as you would like to be treated
  • Be the first to say “Hello”
  • Develop your mind in school, but also develop other skills and interests, including music, art, and physical fitness. This is where teamwork develops its roots
  • Be a well-rounded person
  • Resist taking “easy” classes
  • Dig into math, the sciences, and computers. These form the technical foundation for future success
  • Study language
  • Speak and write English correctly
  • Appreciate other cultures by learning another language
  • Be honest in your approach to learning
  • Resist the temptation to cheat—you only hurt yourself
  • Develop a keen interest in the outside world
  • Pay attention to the “news.” The “real” world can be very different from the student world you live in today
  • Avoid the temptations of alcohol, smoking, drugs, gangs, and irresponsible personal behavior
  • Understand the steps you take today have lifelong implications
  • Choose your friends wisely
  • Do what you can to make a teacher’s job easier, not harder. Teaching is one of the most important, most difficult, and most underpaid professions in the world
  • Participate—but don’t be a pain!
  • Be a friend to all. Extend a hand of friendship to all other students, regardless of race, creed, or color
  • Make a special effort to be a friend to those less fortunate than you
  • As you mature and face new challenges, don’t hesitate to discuss with me what is on your mind. You might learn from the mistakes of others
  • Recognize how LUCKY you are to live and be educated in this great country. People from around the world are dying every day trying to get INTO this country…not out
  • Don’t forget to have fun!!
  • School can be a great time in your life
  • Experience it
  • Live it
  • Enjoy it

Many of these suggestions will be useful throughout your life—learn them well. I wish you the greatest success in your efforts and hope you find school both rewarding and enjoyable.

Love,

Dad/Grandpa

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Ten Things You Need to Know for Friday
by Bryan Schott
May 24, 2013 | 18406 views | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Countdown: There are 166 days to the 2013 municipal elections, 249 days until the start of the 2014 Legislature, 525 days until the 2014 midterm elections and 962 days until the 2016 Iowa Caucuses. 

An analysis says expanding Medicaid coverage will save Utah more than $130 million and would give health insurance to 123,000 residents [Tribune].

A new report ranks Utah #1 for economic outlook next year [Utah Policy, Tribune].

House Majority Leader Brad Dee goes on a European vacation with three lobbyists, but Dee insists the trip was above board because everybody paid their own way and they didn’t discuss politics [Tribune].

Former Attorney General Mark Shurtleff is caught on tape offering to get $2 million for Utah Businessman Darl McBride if he would shut down a website critical of another Utah businessman. That money was to come from a third Utah businessman who was in trouble with the Attorney General’s office [Tribune].

Former Legislator and current blogger Holly Richardson says she’s had enough with the “culture of corruption” permeating the Attorney General’s office [Holly on the Hill].

Sen. Orrin Hatch wants to hear from Utahns who think they have been inappropriately targeted by the IRS as part of his investigation into misconduct by the agency [Tribune].

Kennecott lays off 100 workers because of the massive landslide at their Bingham Canyon Mine [Tribune, Deseret News].

The Boy Scouts vote to allow gay members in their ranks [Deseret News].

Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman launches a new political action committee to support Republicans who share his point of view [Tribune].

Gov. Gary Herbert says he is confident the state can work out a deal to avoid taxing the electricity used by the new National Security Agency data center at Camp Williams [Tribune].
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