It was work that originally led me to sign up for Twitter and other social media platforms. For a number of years, social media became my work. Even when I retired, I was still managing the company’s social media platforms.
From 2003 to 2004, I spent nine months working in communications for St. Louis Public Schools, which was in dire straits. Enrollment had declined to an official 40,000 from a peak of about 100,000, and the district was still operating school buildings, a headquarters building, and an administrative staff that supported a 100,000 enrollment. A management firm was hired by a reform school board to take over and do the painful stuff that had to be done. The management firm was in place all of two days when it discovered that the district was bankrupt.
To continue reading, please see my post today at Dancing Priest.
Photograph by Sara Kurfeß via Unsplash. Used with permission.
Some Wednesday Readings
R.E. Lee, the father: Great tickle fighter and more – JoAnna McDonald at Emerging Civil War.
How Normandy Remembers the Only U.S. Military Chaplain Killed on D-Day – Blake Stilwell
at Military.com.
Book Notes: Union General Daniel Butterfield – Civil War Books & Authors.
No comments:
Post a Comment