Bearcat Wrap-up Podcast - Week 11: The Science of Steady

Episode Date: October 24, 2025

Happy Friday!Thank you for the consistency and professionalism you continue to demonstrate each week. There were no major events on the calendar. Still, the steady rhythm of teaching, learning, and le...ading has continued uninterrupted, and that is often where the most significant progress takes place. Every attendance reminder, every reteaching moment, and every calm response to a student’s frustration contributes to the stability our students depend on. Together, we are proving that slow, deliberate effort produces lasting results.Our district continues to stay focused on the same three performance targets that define our mission: academic growth, attendance at or above 93.5 percent, and continued improvement in student behavior and school climate. These goals provide the framework for how we measure our collective progress and guide the adjustments we make each week. As we close this first full quarter of the school year, it is clear that steady commitment from our staff is building lasting improvement across every school.The Science of SteadyThe Science of Steady reminds us that growth is rarely dramatic or immediate. Like any long-term experiment, our work requires patience, precise observation, and a willingness to refine rather than reinvent. Teachers are scientists in this sense—testing ideas, adjusting variables, and collecting evidence in the form of student understanding. The power of this method lies not in speed but in fidelity. When we hold steady through the process, the results compound. A class that reads daily, a grade level that collaborates weekly, or a school that analyzes data consistently will always outperform one that moves in spurts of intensity.Across the district, our work this semester shows the effectiveness of this approach. Attendance has held near our target despite the season’s illnesses. Behavior incidents remain manageable, with most students responding positively to our plans and expectations. Instructional pacing and formative checks are helping identify needs before they become gaps. These are not small achievements; they are signs of a system learning to self-correct through steady leadership at every level.Steadiness is also about balance, holding firm to what works while remaining open to what can improve. Our students and staff continue to show that progress is made not through sudden leaps, but through intentional, day-to-day practice. That is the science behind lasting success, and it is evident in every classroom across Mena Public Schools.Closing CelebrationsSteady connection remains one of our greatest strengths. At Holly Harshman Elementary, students continue their regular visits to the Green House Cottages of Homewood to play games and spend time with residents. These moments bridge generations and bring joy to both age groups, reminding us that patience, kindness, and presence are learned by doing. That same spirit shows up across campuses as high school and middle school student organizations serve in our elementary buildings, reading with younger students, assisting teachers, and modeling leadership through quiet, consistent help.Classrooms stayed active and hands-on this week. First graders learned about government with a visit from our Sheriff and our Mayor, connecting civics to daily life and public service. Fourth-grade scientists put new stream tables to work from a recent STEM grant, modeling river erosion and testing how small changes in flow create big changes in the landscape. Our future educators represented Mena at the Educators Rising Fall Leadership Conference in Little Rock, sharpening skills in leadership, professionalism, and community service.October is also Economics Education Month, a time to recognize the importance of financial literacy and economic understanding in every grade level. Mena Public Schools is fortunate to have Mrs. Tracy Floyd serving as an Economics Arkansas Ambassador, representing our district in statewide efforts to bring real-world economics into the classroom. Many of our teachers use Economics Arkansas resources for professional development, lesson planning, and student contests, helping students connect classroom learning to the choices they make every day. These lessons in decision-making, entrepreneurship, and resource management prepare our students not only for academic success but for life.Our students also continue to serve others. Bearcats Supporting Bearcats used donations from this year’s Powder Puff game to purchase hygiene products for students in every building. Thank you to everyone who contributed to this thoughtful project and helped ensure that all students have what they need to feel confident and cared for.Our #menareads effort continues to grow, and it has been encouraging to see so many posts celebrating students who are reading, writing, and sharing their progress. The steady stream of photos and videos across our schools shows that reading is becoming part of our culture, not just a classroom activity. I want to thank the teachers and staff who have made this visible by organizing reading challenges, spotlighting student readers, and modeling a love of literacy themselves. Each post represents more than participation; it reflects the collective commitment to building confident, capable readers across every grade level.In athletics, the Junior Bearcats earned a 44–32 victory over Dover at Bob Carver Bearcat Stadium and will travel to Clinton next week. Our cross-country teams competed at the Buck Fever Showcase and continue to show steady improvement, and our Ladycat Volleyball team has advanced to the 4A State Tournament. Bearcat Football travels to Dover tonight for a 7:00 p.m. kickoff. Thank you to our students, coaches, sponsors, and families who support steady progress in practice, competition, and character.As a reminder, Mena Public Schools will be closed on Monday, October 27, as part of our modified calendar. These scheduled Mondays or Fridays each month are designed to support attendance and overall student and staff well-being. By providing families a built-in day for medical and personal appointments, we reduce the need for absences during instructional days and help maintain consistent attendance throughout the year. Extending the weekend also allows additional time for deep cleaning of facilities, which helps limit the spread of seasonal illness. Teachers use this time for planning, grading, and preparation, ensuring that instruction during the week remains focused and purposeful. These short breaks are intentional, not interruptions to learning, but part of the rhythm that keeps our district steady, healthy, and productive.It was a good week of steady growth at Mena Public Schools.At Mena Public Schools, our students are prepared, our staff is supported, and our community is confident.Keep the #menareads posts and videos coming, and have a great long weekend! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit bearcatwrap.substack.com

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Good afternoon and welcome to the week 11 wrap up entitled The Science of Steady. Every calm, consistent day moves us closer to our goals by building the trust, habits, and stability that lasting success requires. Happy Friday. Thank you for your consistency and professionalism you continue to demonstrate each week. There were no major events on the calendar. Still, the steady rhythm of teaching, learning, and leading has continued. uninterrupted, and that is often where the most significant progress takes place. Every attendance reminder, every reteaching moment, and every calm response to a student's
Starting point is 00:00:41 frustration contributes to the stability that our students depend on. Together we are proving that slow, deliberate effort produces lasting results. Our district continues to stay focused on the same three performance targets that are updated in the link, the three performance targets that define our mission, academic growth, attendance at or above 93.5 percent, and continued improvement in student behavior and school climate. These goals provide the framework for how we measure our collective progress and guide the adjustments we make each week. As we close this first full quarter of the year, it is clear that steady commitment from
Starting point is 00:01:24 our staff and building is building lasting and improvement across every school. The science of study. The science of study reminds us that growth is really dramatic or immediate. Like any long-term experiment, our work requires patience, precise observation, and willingness to refine rather than reinvent. Teachers are scientists in this sense. Testing ideas, adjusting variables, and collecting evidence in the form of student understanding. The power of this method lies not in speed, but in fidelity.
Starting point is 00:02:02 When we hold steady through the process, the results compound. A class that reads daily, a grade level that collaborates weekly, or a school that analyzes data consistently will always outperform one that moves in spurts of intensity. Across the district, our work this semester shows the effectiveness of this approach, Attendance has held near our target despite the season's illnesses. Behavior incidents remain manageable, with most students responding positively to our plans and expectations. Instructional pacing and formative checks are helping identify needs before they become gaps. These are not small achievements.
Starting point is 00:02:47 They are the signs of a system learning to self-correct through steady leadership at every level. Stabbiness is also about balance, holding firm to what works while remaining open to what can improve. Our students and staff continue to show that progress is made not through sudden leaps, but through intentional day-to-day practice. That is the signs behind lasting success, and it is evident in every classroom across MENA public schools. Closing celebrations. Steady connection remains one of our greatest strengths. At Holly Harshman Elementary, students continue to their regular visits to the greenhouse cottages of Homewood to play games and spend time with residents.
Starting point is 00:03:34 These moments bring bridge generations and bring joy to both age groups, reminding us that patience, kindness, and presence are learned by doing. The same spirit shows up across campuses at high school and middle school. high school and middle school students organizations serve in our elementary buildings reading with younger students assisting teachers and modeling leadership through quite consistent help classrooms stayed active and hands-on this week first graders learned about government with a visit from our sheriff and our mayor connecting civics to daily life and public service
Starting point is 00:04:12 fourth grade scientists put new stream tables to work from a STEM grant modeling river erosion and testing how small changes and flow create big changes in the landscape. Our future educators represented MENA at the Educators Rising Fall Leadership Conference. In Magnolia, sharpening skills in leadership, professionalism, and community service. October is also Economics Education Month. There are a couple of links in this paragraph with more about the Month and Economics, Arkansas. Arkansas. Economics Education Month is a time to recognize the importance of financial literacy and economic understanding at every grade level. In the
Starting point is 00:04:57 Public Schools is fortunate to have Ms. Tracy Floyd serving as an Economics Arkansas ambassador representing our district and statewide efforts to bring real-world economics into the classroom. Many of our teachers use economics Arkansas resources for professional development lesson planning and student contests helping students connect classroom learning to the choices they make every day. These lessons in decision-making, entrepreneurship, and resource management prepare our students not only for academics, success, but for life. Our students also continue to serve others. Bearcats supporting Bearcats use
Starting point is 00:05:34 donations from this year's powder puff game to purchase hygiene products for students in every building. Thank you to everyone who contributed to this thoughtful project and helped ensure that all students have what they need to feel confident and cared for. Our hashtag Meena Reid's effort continues to grow and it has been encouraging to see so many posts celebrating students who are reading, writing, and sharing their progress. The steady stream of photos and videos across our schools show that reading is becoming part of our culture and not just a classroom activity. I want to think that teachers and staff who have made
Starting point is 00:06:11 this visible by organizing reading challenges, spotlighting student readers, and modeling a love of literacy themselves. Each post represents more than participation. It reflects the collective commitment to building confident, capable readers across every grade level. In athletics, the junior Bearcats earned a 44-32 victory over Dover at Bob Carver Barcats Stadium last night and will travel to Clinton next week. Across country teams competed at the Buck Fever Showcase and continue to show steady improvement and our Lady Cat volleyball team has advanced to the 4A state tournament.
Starting point is 00:06:48 Bearcat football travels to Dover tonight or 7 p.m. kickoff. Thank you to our students, coaches, sponsors, and families who support steady progress in practice, competition, and character. As a reminder, Mena Public Schools will be closed on Monday, October 27th as part of our modified calendar. These scheduled Mondays or Fridays each month are designed to support attendance and overall student and staff well-being. By providing families a built-in day for medical and personal appointments, we reduce the need for absences during instructional days
Starting point is 00:07:24 and help maintain consistent attendance throughout the year. Extending the weekend also allows additional time for deep cleaning of facilities which helps limit the spread of seasonal illness. Teachers use this time for planning, grading, and preparation, ensuring that instruction during the week remains focused and purposeful. These short breaks are intentional, not interruptions to learning, but part of the rhythm that keeps our district steady, healthy, and productive. It was a good week of steady growth at Mena Public Schools. At Mena Public Schools, our students are prepared, our staff is supported, and our community is confident.
Starting point is 00:08:01 Keep the hashtag Mena Reads, posts, and videos coming, and have a great long weekend.

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