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Find or Refer a Contractor in Tyler

Tyler, Texas Commercial Properties

November 3rd, 2010

 

Tyler TX Commercial Real Estate Properties

Tyler TX Commercial Real Estate Properties

Moving your business to eastern Texas can be a daunting task.  Thankfully, real estate professionals can help you as you look for Tyler, Texas commercial properties.  Tyler is a booming town with a wide variety of people; those who enjoy the arts, senior citizens, parents who have chosen Tyler for its excellent school systems, and university students all call Tyler home.  Aside from Tyler residents, many tourists flock to the town each year for vacation.

Find a real estate agent by searching for Tyler, Texas commercial properties on sites such as TylerTXHomeSearch.com.  Talk to several until you find one that you feel you can work closely with.  Your Realtor will be able to walk you through the process of obtaining a commercial loan, will show you properties that meet your specifications and may be able to give you tips and advice on what types of people frequent which neighborhoods in Tyler. It is best to find an agent that specialized in one particular part of town as they will know everything there is to know about the location you are considering.

Whether you are hoping to open a hotel for tourists, a diner for young families and college students, a sports store for active adults or an arcade for children, you can be successful in Tyler.  With such a wide variety of available Tyler, Texas commercial properties, you are sure to find something suitable for your chosen business.  Soon you can be one of the many who call Tyler, Texas home.

Chuy’s in Tyler Texas

October 28th, 2010

Join our Tyler restaurant coupon list

Chuy's opening May 17th Tyler Texas

Elvis Statue at Chuy's in Tyler TX

Chuy's Mexican Food in Tyler TX

Chuy's in Tyler TX

Tyler Texas keeps getting these new and great restaurants coming to town. When will it ever stop? Not that I care for it to stop but it just seems like restaurant overkill.

Chuy’s Tex-Mex Restaurant is one of those Austin Texas restaurants I remember as a kid that had a type of 1980’s flare about it.

Chuy’s opened in downtown Dallas but it didn’t last and was eventually closed. I think they found some better locations in the Dallas area since over by SMU off of I75

Chuys in my mind is better than On the Border but then again I was a kid when I ate there. I never really thought they would one day be in Tyler.

That old Brass Lion building by Lowes and Spring Creek Barbeque will be torn down and Chuys will be built in it’s place. This will give Chuys a prime location in Tyler.

I thought I would slip in this Tyler restaurant coupon discount email list you can join. We send you good solid valuable Tyler restaurant coupons and offers right to your email. Type in your email and click “Submit” and your done!

Chuys in Dallas is kind of a cool hang out place for university students and people with really colorful Cowboy boots. I am not sure what type of crowd it will attract in Tyler.

University Model School

August 26th, 2010

​Teaching can be a funny gig! Teachers have a way of developing relationships with those at other schools by simply moving from institution to institution, and mingling with others who do the same, not unlike waiters or bartenders.

As someone who has been teaching in and out of East Texas for a number of years now, there are a couple of local schools with whom I have a personal connection, and I’ve not been shy about promoting them.

So over the last year and half a lot of my writing has focused on individual private schools in the Tyler area. In recent weeks however I’ve started to approach the subject from a bit different angle.

Rather than simply giving the skinny on the individual schools, I’ve started looking into and discussing the methodology and curriculum on which they are founded.

Like any other business, private schools generally form around a need or concept that their founders find lacking in other existing institutions within the community. This is exactly how Grace Preparatory Academy (GPA) in Fort Worth, Texas was formed back in 1992, and it lead to a new style or model in private schools called the university model.

​The founders of GPA had collectively tried all existing forms of education for their children, from public, to private, to home school, and found no single form that embodied all the strengths they were seeking for their families.

After meeting with others experiencing similar dilemmas, they elected to try a radical solution, combining the best of home and private schooling, into a sort of hybrid.

The new school would function very much like a university. Students register for the classes they require to graduate, while taking others at home with a parent or tutor.

The same classes are not held every day, so enrolled students, need not be on campus everyday and in fact some schools hold no classes on off days during the week.

The novel system was a success, and interest in the new approach began to generate both across the state and eventually the country. Thus a new overarching organization was formed to provide assistance to new university model schools.

The new foundation was named the National Association of University Model Schools (NAUMS).

University Model Schools (UMS) were formed to provide parents with an alternative approach to educating their students that would allow them to play a more active role, and give them a greater voice in how and what their children are taught.

Obviously the NAUMS is a religious organization whose goal it is to help establish solid Christian schools around the country.

​As interesting and original as this new method is, astute readers are probably curious about a) how the system benefits the individual students, and b) propaganda aside, how the individual school and student functions on a day to day basis within the new system. NAUMS is not a curriculum.

In fact each school chooses its own curriculum, and develops its own identity apart from the umbrella organization. All schools who follow the model however, do aspire to building Christian character and strong academic programs.

Do University Model Schools consistently succeed in producing students of faith who are ready for college life? As with any school, the preverbal devil is in the details. The success of any school is in my opinion, largely determined by the quality of teachers employed there.

Since any NAUMS school can use the curriculum and educators of its choice there is room for it to rise or fall on that basis, but to my knowledge, most of the UMS institutions around the country are showing excellent results.

Another interesting component is that these schools draw not only from area homeschoolers, but also from other private and public schools.

Now I’ll be honest, I’m a proponent of UMS, but I also have to concede that the program may not be for every student or parent.

The method does require the student to be both motivated and responsible, but it also helps to build those qualities into the student at the same time.

The parent on the other hand must be a participant in their child’s education. This is not the approach for the parent who tends to wants little day to day, involvement in their student’s learning.

For more information on University Model Schools, visit the NAUMS web page at http://www.naums.net/index2.html. To read more on the first UM School go to http://www.graceprep.org/. To investigate Tyler’s own UMS read my article entitled Something Different in Education, by simply clicking on the following link, http://www.tylertxdirectory.com/1134/something-different-in-education/.