wanton-wonton
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- Aug 14, 2004
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- 2005
You go on BOS at school? ......... Erm.Dreamerish*~ said:Yeah. I'm sitting in the library of a selective school right now. Look what I'm doing.
You go on BOS at school? ......... Erm.Dreamerish*~ said:Yeah. I'm sitting in the library of a selective school right now. Look what I'm doing.
Haha, I guess I'd come most under the group in bold. But I agree entirely with what you said.Dreamerish*~ said:Both of you have a somewhat stereotypical view of selective schools.
I attend a selective school - not a crazy (in the best way, of course ) one like James Ruse - but it's still reasonably ranked. There are all sorts of people in my school. You'd have the groups that worry about studying and talk of nothing except 4U maths, and you'd have bludgers that don't show up half of the time. What sets us apart from public schools is that we do not offer subjects which scale badly, and the textbooks we use (as far as I'm concerned - for maths, anyway) have slightly more challenging contents.
People in selective schools are still normal, for God's sake. The school sets higher standards and puts more pressure on them, but it doesn't turn them into another species.
I expect assessment marks in at least the high 80s not because I'm a "selective-school snob", but because that's the standard I set for myself. I can say that 99% depends on the individual - the 1% left for schools that push students harder than others, and school scaling.
That's not true. I don't go to a selective school but I find myself discussing politics, current affairs and world issues with my friends and peers almost everyday. It's such a generalisation to say that non-selective kids all get drunk on the weekends, and then proudly discuss how smashed they got when they come back to school. Frankly, its just as bad as saying all selective kids are nerdy and have no lives.Ashe said:I'm reminded when I talk to non-selective kids of the environment I come from. Conversation is more likely to revolve around politics, current affairs, world issues and things like that than how smashed they were on the weekend.
I agree with thatknobblett said:I'm @ NSB, and although our grade UAI average will be say 96-97, we are still big procrastinators, spending many hours on the net and in front of the tv...
Why? I don't know.. But we still do have social lives...