pitwhousedtodopokemon said
To be completely honest, I really don't feel like that.
I never accused you of being as awkward as 15-year-old me.
Marik said
Canadian High School sounds nice. They did nothing like that here. It was more or less teachers trying to fill a quota so they didn't get fired. And the one's that did care about what they taught always got harassed by complaining students. They’d always say that the work was too much when it really wasn’t. Hell, when I gave a shit I was able to get most of it done in class. Now that I think about it, I had some really shitty kids in my classes.
I don't think it's a Canadian school thing. I'm American, but I still totally agree with Dervish about the "training wheels for life" thing. Sure, high school was shitty, but, life is shitty. High school teaches you how to accept responsibility and get work done like an adult, all while forcing you to work with superiors and peers that you hate, thus teaching you to how to handle these things - just like you'll have to in the real world.
I really wish that sort of thing was brought to more people's attention. All through high school, I heard people constantly complaining about how the work was "too much" (when really it wasn't and they'd face much bigger work loads in their futures), that the content they were learning "wouldn't even help them in the real world" (when that's not the point; learning how to handle the work is the point), and just how much their teachers sucked (when they'd undoubtedly have to deal with bosses they don't like in the future, and it's probably best they just learn how to get along with or at the very least tolerate those above them).
I saw my view on all this as a sort of success formula that I only wished it was easier to share. While I diligently worked along on things - keeping my grades high, preparing myself for what college will be like, and doing it all while remaining fairly positive about it all - so many students around me just seemed to spend their time developing bad habits and complaining about teachers' attempts to give them the skills they'd need to do well in college or at the very least, dealing with real people as adults.
It's kind of sad, really.