Thursday, November 13, 2014

Next week is T-2-4 SUCCESS WEEK in SBISD!

T-2-4 Success Week is about passionate belief! It’s about students, families, friends, and educators who believe all Texas students belong on the path to education beyond high school. It’s about believing that the future depends on our success. CLICK HERE TO VIEW PHOTO GALLERY >>

Campuses around Spring Branch ISD will be celebrating T-2-4  Success Week during the week of November 17-21. From researching different majors and careers, to learning what schools have to offer that make them special, students will have a range of conversations, activities and exposure to the tools and resources they need to find their ‘best fit’ for life after high school graduation. Make sure to check with your campus to find out what fun and exciting activities you and your students can participate in to help find the best T-2-4 fit. 

Looking for more? Get inspired by hearing students, parents, and our supporters tell their stories on the following websites, and find out how more education means more options:
What can you do to help support T-2-4 Success Week in SBISD?

Educators & Students: 

Show us what you've got! Share your T-2-4 pride with us @SBISD #dreambigachievebigT24SUCCESS all week long!
  • Monday - Wear sunglasses as a reminder of focusing on achieving those goals.
  • Tuesday - Wear college hat, visor, etc., and discuss difference college choices.
  • Wednesday - Wear a college shirt, jersey, etc. and talk about the purpose of college.
  • Thursday - Wear running shoes & colorful socks…discuss future careers choices.
  • Friday - Wear school spirit shirt to support the college of your choice!
What is your college or career dream? What T-2-4 path do you plan to take? Take a snapshot and share it with us on social media...you never know who you might inspire! Get creative- group college t-shirt photos, a shot where you have written your one word dream for your future college or career...share it all with us! We'll be looking for the biggest dreams and BRIGHTEST smiles. Remember, success looks different for everyone!

Parents:
  • Encourage your child to participate in the themed activities on campus all week long!
  • Talk to your child about how he/she would like continue their education after high school.
  • Print or draw the logo of his/her dream college/university.
  • Have your student interview you about your college and career experiences. Bring the interview to school this week and share with classmates and peers.
  • Encourage your child to think about their dream career and how they can prepare for the future now!

Dogs of Character


Lizzie was left alone on a city street. Scout is different from most dogs with four legs, but being different is good. Guthrie, a thin-coated pug, was found shivering outside in the cold Oklahoma snow.

Three rescue dogs. Three heart-warming stories. One school cafeteria filled with totally captivated elementary students. If you want young children to recall your message, bring a rescue dog to the presentation.
On Oct. 28, several hundred Rummel Creek Elementary School students learned how rescue dogs Lizzie, Scout and Guthrie had survived, and how their personal stories and interaction with the families that adopted them, have changed all who have become involved with them ever after.

The Dogs of Character presentation was titled “Who Will You Rescue?” Rescue dog owners and Dogs of Character program leaders hosted a cafeteria assembly with big anti-bullying and empathy focused messages.

The rescue dogs Lizzie, Scout and Guthrie taught the children lessons from their lives in perseverance, courage, self-worth, leadership and responsibility.

Owners like Vanessa Goodman related how a Yellow Labrador with a missing leg, and multiple health issues resulting in three surgeries, can change your own world view. Suddenly, your own leg surgery is not that big a deal.

“Scout has lost a leg, but she still comes running. Scout is different, but different is good. She can do things with three legs that you would not believe,” Vanessa told a rapt assembly of students.

“She helps me with my own attitude. She is the pack leader in our house and she is the fastest of all our dogs,” she added.

Joy Southard, director of Dogs of Character, says that children get a living example of positive life skills and responses with the rescue dogs like Scout and others. The Dogs of Character group has 75 rescue dogs in its program.

Dogs of Character programs are usually presented to elementary-age children, in part, because younger students tend to have more empathy for rescue dog stories than secondary students. “A rescue dog speaks directly to children,” she says.

Counselor Jennifer Buchert, who helped bring the program to Rummel Creek, is anxious to connect Scout’s story of courage and perseverance to more classroom lessons this fall.

“What’s cool to me is that a program like this can enrich the social and emotional aspect of the learning environment, which ties directly into the SBISD System of Care climate and culture piece of the district’s T-2-4 Plan,” Buchert says.

At the end of the assembly, students recited a Dogs of Character Pledge that asked them to be “rescuers” in situations where bullying, name calling, or other negative actions occur in their lives.

Outside the cafeteria, students lined up and then slowly walked past Scout, Lizzie and the pug, Guthrie, all of whom received appreciative pats from students. Talk about being loved!

To learn more about the Dogs of Character program, contact:
Joy Southard
Phone: 936-525-7385