Aaron Robb (@aaronrobb5) 's Twitter Profile
Aaron Robb

@aaronrobb5

Principal of Wahconah Regional High School | Proud father of three

ID: 4237392297

linkhttps://wahconah.cbrsd.org calendar_today20-11-2015 21:38:35

10,10K Tweet

1,1K Followers

1,1K Following

The Bulwark (@bulwarkonline) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Sen. Murphy: “Billionaires don't need public schools…If every public school disappears in this country, they will still be able to get their kids an education…Billionaires don't need Medicaid. So to them it doesn't matter if Medicaid disappears.”

MSAA (@msaa_33) 's Twitter Profile Photo

MSAA Administrators Coaching Program #GrowingCourageousLeaders -Don’t miss this opportunity to invest in your new, 2nd or 3rd-year administrator! Request a Coach! tinyurl.com/yc422avr Massachusetts K-12 Martin Geoghegan (he/him/his) BostonPublicSchools Rick Rogers Christopher Jones John Quinn

MSAA Administrators Coaching Program #GrowingCourageousLeaders -Don’t miss this opportunity to invest in your new, 2nd or 3rd-year administrator!  Request a Coach! tinyurl.com/yc422avr
<a href="/MASchoolsK12/">Massachusetts K-12</a> <a href="/MGeoghegan22/">Martin Geoghegan (he/him/his)</a> <a href="/BostonSchools/">BostonPublicSchools</a> <a href="/rickrogers409/">Rick Rogers</a> <a href="/DrCSJones/">Christopher Jones</a>
<a href="/PrincipalJQuinn/">John Quinn</a>
Beanie (@beanie0597) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We adults do kids a great disservice when we lead them to believe that every aspect of their lives should be fun & entertaining. This is especially true when it comes to their education. Of course we hope kids like school & learning but education, not entertainment, is the goal.

Ryan Holiday (@ryanholiday) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Be strict only with yourself. It was said that the true majesty of Marcus Aurelius was that his exactingness was directed only at himself: "Tolerant with others," he reminded himself, "strict with yourself.

Ryan Holiday (@ryanholiday) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Not a lot of people understand this... but you actually don’t have to have an opinion about everything. You don’t have to decide if something is good or bad. Marcus Aurelius says limiting the amount of opinions we have is one of the most powerful things we can do in life.

Brian Mendler (@brianmendler) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Teachers who have less behavior issues have the following in common: 1. Have great relationships with their students 2. Firm but fair 3. Don't take things personally 4. Involve students in making classroom decisions and rules 5. Uses humor What else would you add? #teacher

MassLive HS Sports (@masslivehs) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Wahconah and Palmer placed first in their respective divisions at the 13th annual sectional championships. masslive.com/highschoolspor…

𝐁𝐫𝐚𝐝 𝐉𝐨𝐡𝐧𝐬𝐨𝐧 (@drbradjohnson) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Some students come to school because of band, sports, art, theater, and other extracurricular activities. Don’t underestimate what keeps some students connected.

Joe Sanfelippo (@joe_sanfelippo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

People don’t INVEST in things they don’t know about. When 80% of the voting public don’t have kids in school, we need to find ways to make sure they stay connected. #LeadFromWhereYouAre #HackingLeadership #1minwalk2work #CraftingTheCulture #GiveYourselfAChance #throwback

Jamy Bechler (@coachbechler) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Being coachable means you're willing to consider feedback even if you don't like what you hear. It means resisting the urge to make excuses or get defensive when challenged. Getting better is more important than your ego. You'd rather get it right than be right.

Joe Sanfelippo (@joe_sanfelippo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

July 1st!!! Leaders in NEW ROLES!!! Few pieces of advice… 1. You don’t know everything. It’s ok. 2. Stay connected to the classroom. 3. You’re not a search firm. Hire great people…then help them get better. 4 Take the work seriously…but don’t take yourself too seriously.

Brian Kight (@tbriankight) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Let your kids struggle. Not all day. Not so much it breaks them. Not for the rest of their lives. But for the sake of their future and ours, let your kids struggle and learn early how to deal with friction, adversity, self-reliance, discipline, and the weight of responsibility.