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I know. I wasn't usually that troublesome at school but me and my French teacher hated each other. I'm not proud of that moment though. :(
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I was liked but a nightmare ( which was my nickname for a short time)
never ate dinner and was regularly sent home for it hid everywhere ran away all the time refused to stop running/fasten my coat/ anything never stopped talking/giggling told a teacher my older brother was a stranger when he came to collect me, she almost called the police I brought mud/worms and ladybirds into school to upset a teacher with an issue Wrote alison had a wee on a desk... I didn't like alison High school bunked off constantly threw away a map on a school trip and got our group lost on a moor in durham for 4hrs burped the word parsnips everyday in registration Sent a scruffy kid a tin of MR DOG wrapped as a present on valentines day... he cried. laughed my head off when my best friend fainted in assembly thinking she was joking.. she wasn't hiding in her house from our English teacher and spiting on his head from her bedroom window. Staying up all night on another trip and almost being sent home for being 'giddy' |
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One of our french/spanish teachers was a bit of a nervous wreck too, her name was Miss Friar or something like that.
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My French teacher was amazing, she let us virtually cheat in our coursework and I would have failed overall if I hadn't (got two A*s on speaking and writing courseworks and two Ds on the reading and listening papers)
There was a boy and a girl in my French class who hated each other and argued every lesson and she egged them on :laugh: |
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3rd year (14 years old-ish) you do the groundwork in preparation for 4th year (15 years old-ish) where you sit your Standard Grades; but at my school they started changing some courses to Intermediates instead of Standard Grades, so in 3rd year you would sit Intermediate 1 exams and 4th year you would sit Intermediate 2 exams. 5th year (16 years old-ish) you sit Highers, if you do well then you'll probably get unconditional offers for places at universities, if you don't do so well then you can rely on 6th year (17 years old-ish) to retake subjects, or sit Advanced Highers, which you would do either because you'd done well in 5th year and perhaps you wanted a challenge, or if you were applying to a really good uni (Oxford, Cambridge etc) because you would need to gain equivalent qualifications to A-Levels. I used to dread working with the disruptive kids because it could be quite intimidating, I'd be sent outside with a group of kids, or sometimes half the class, and just be given work to teach to them, so I wouldn't even have time to prepare it or think about it, I'd just have to work on the spot. There were a lot of times where my lessons failed and there were a lot of times where it worked really well. I found that the best way to get a rowdy kid to engage was to joke along with them, if they like you then that's half the battle; kids don't want to listen to people they don't respect, but if they find you interesting or think you give fun lessons (though not to the point of pandering, obviously) then I found that they'd be willing to give you the time of day. Those hit/miss lessons were with kids aged 15 or thereabouts, that awkward stage where they're either really loud and hyperactive or painfully shy and awkward, I'd see a lot of mild bullying and at one point I even lectured some 13 year old kids about not picking on this one boy who was very, very quiet and used to be the butt of their jokes... and I had a similar situation with 9 year old kids where I had to shout at them in German and I couldn't tell if they were shocked that I was being serious or that I was speaking to them in German :laugh: because I was there to teach English... Felt quite proud of myself for doing that though, they never once made fun of those kids again in both cases, at least not when I was there... |
Why are the Scottish and Irish systems so complicated? The English and Welsh system makes the most sense
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I don't think it's complicated at all; I think the English one is complicated :laugh: guess it just depends on what you were brought up with.
Scottish year groups run according to the year you were born in... so in my case, the people in my year were all born in the same year as me, and maybe in December the year before or January the year after, but generally everyone is the same age. In England I believe it runs according to the school year... so you could be a month older than someone (e.g. you were born in August and they were born in September) but you would be the year above them at school, which seems mad to me... |
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..Ah thanks for explaining how the Scottish school years work, I was a bit confused..it sounds quite a flexible system in general..?.. ...hmm, sometimes you do have to ‘wing’ your lessons because I guess the point is that you’re not working with pupils who cope well with structure, which is often why it’s better for them to be in a smaller group and so long as the curriculum is covered in what you are doing, your ‘working on the spot’ was probably much better for them and you said a lot of the time it worked well..?..it probably worked well for them a lot more than you thought but I understand that you might not have thought so..if you have a lesson plan and you get through it without disruption and the pupils produce good work then you’re bound to get a feeling of satisfaction...it’s a bit like a tick list, that same feeling...it’s not as instant feel good thing when you’re working with disruptive pupils or ones with learning difficulties, it’s a bit more of a slow burner but the fact that you did feel as though it went well a lot of times means you were actually very good at engaging those pupils that the teacher couldn’t in a more structured lesson...you know, sometimes people can find things difficult to understand/do for whatever reason and their self-consciousness about that can be masked in messing around and drawing attention in other ways....that’s why sometimes bad behaviour can be a sign that you’re looking for that someone needs extra help and isn't always a negative thing.... ..but you know Zee, everything you’ve said that I’ve bolded says that you would make an excellent teacher, whether it be a year/class teacher or working with children with learning difficulties who would benefit with someone like you to guide them..I know that you don’t want to do it but I think that’s a loss to the Scottish education system because if you’ve got a child’s attention and respect then you’ll find they don’t want to mess around so much and start to learn..and that’s what you did... |
Not sure it's that naughty but I hated ICT. So dull and boring. So I just use to play games and when the IT technician guy who sat in a small office with another guy, probably looking at porn, blocked one site I'd then find another. That's how bad ICT was.
And of course, when the teacher came over near you we'd all switch back to work. |
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The best we ever got was Page 3 and that was quickly banned. The day Youtube went was torrid. Use to love it in Geography. Banging out Wet Wet Wet - Love Is All Around. Quickly became the official Geography song for some of us. Each week we'd play it. Never got old. Good ol' Marti Pellow and that long hair of his. |
I went to high school at 13 too zee, much better system high school is no place for a kid of 11 ... lol!
What they have here now is the comprehensive system I think, it's rubbish. |
I went to high school at 13 too zee, much better system high school is no place for a kid of 11 ... lol!
What they have here now is the comprehensive system I think, it's rubbish. |
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Yeah, hilariously my school banned the councils webpage once |
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