I Believe
When I was growing up, I never had issues with going to school. When I get here I know what is expected of me and I try my best to do it. I am very fortunate to receive an education, but when does learning stop being a blessing and become a curse? My problem isn’t with the education itself, it’s the system. The people running it have all of these rules that aren’t all necessary. Not everyone can afford it, not everyone can agree with it, nor can anybody physically deal with it.
Around our age, you are dealing with many other things besides school. Whether it be work, after school activities, sports, you name it. Then you come home afterwards to do whatever tasks your parents have waiting for you on top of homework. Getting to bed at a reasonable time after such a day isn’t easy. That is why I do not understand why teachers expect us to be
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Learning is an incredible experience and I would love to continue to learn once I graduate high school. Since I was in elementary school I have dreamed of attending a 4 year college and live out the college life. But as I grew up and realized that school only gets harder as you go on, I grew concerned with the fact I would graduate having to compete to get into schools just like many others. I was not blessed with an extraordinary athletic talent, nor was I an astounding scholar. Therefore scholarships ceased to exist in my life. For those of us who have to pay our way through school, it will not be easy to do so especially for a family with more than one child to send away. It isn’t impossible to do, but it certainly is much harder for the average student. I believe a student shouldn’t have to pay 5-figures to receive an education just because they are not as gifted as others. I understand that countries such as Germany now have tuition-free college and I would love to see that happen
This also falls in the school systems hand to where they set an unreasonable time causing kids to wake up earlier. Getting to bed at a disobliging time after doing hours of school, homework, and other activities is very hard when you also want to be active in the things you do because many still have a social life and want to spend time with family or friends. These many hours of going to school and then returning home to continue doing schoolwork is rough. While also trying your best, it is very hard to maintain sleep and stay aware in your
I am fortunate enough to have parents that can afford to send me to college, and support my choice to pursue a higher education. By attending college, I will eventually graduate with a degree and later earn a high paying career. Along with this, I have found college to be a way to discovering who I am. I have been able to move out, take over my own bills, and earn responsibility by doing so. Unfortunately, not everyone is able to attend college. Financial reasons typically hold individuals back from attending universities, and that later may affect their lives. Although I attend class daily, the true effect college will have on me in the future goes unnoticed. An education is something that is highly valued, and so important. Everyone should have the chance to have an education, but unfortunately, it does not happen. College for me, is a privilege. Therefore, I will work hard to earn my degree, and later put it to
We are all placed purposefully here to be the light for those around us. With the birth of our third child 7 years ago, I dedicated my time to being home to raise my family while my husband embarked on his military flying career. Our lives have been filled with frequent moves, numerous deployments, and friendships scattered around the world. As we move into the season of our life that the children grow older and my husband nears retirement, we are faced with the challenges that come with my return to the workforce. With no college education, there are more limits to my career options as stated in Your College Experience “American society values higher education” (Gardner Barefoot 7). My desires to have a fulfilling job that I can be proud
I remember the early years of my childhood when I arrived at school and was received by the warm greeting of my teachers, who seemed to have special abilities to perceive if I was angry, sad, or hungry. In the classroom, I felt safe and had the confidence to tell my dreams without fear that they would make fun of them, when I was a child, my teachers made me feel loved and protected.
I thought was fully prepared for college when I walked across the stage on June 1st, 2015, but I was completely wrong. College is a whole new lifestyle that you eventually learn to adapt to everyday. The advice you hear from parents everyday is something you take with you as you navigate throughout campus. Some of the previous advice my mother gave to me is the advice I should of listened to. Now that I am older and on my own, it’s up to me to figure out how everything works.
What you see is not always what it is. We learn to perceive what we're looking at, and we get used to how things are supposed to be. I was always fascinated by the illusion pictures that at first glance is strikingly simple to guess what it is, if you give more attention to detail you see another picture in it. What inspired me the most and made me a curious person was how missing one detail can change the whole outlook of the picture – just as missing one aspect from patient’s evaluation can lead to a wrong diagnosis. This taught me the importance of thoroughness in doing anything in my life. My meticulous nature has been an incredible driving force behind who I am
The city of New York is where I reside, mostly when I'm not flying around the world in my elegant, exclusive, exorbitant jet; I'd always mention with a wink. I'm living the dream. Waking up to the warmth of the sun as my alarm, the view of the alluring country from my apartment and Mr. Awares, my butler the man who dresses me... haha okay, I’m not that lazy. Where do I see myself 10 years from where I stand now? A question I could never answer until 10:03pm or was it 10:05pm? Well, who knows, I fell asleep.
12:30 a.m: Finally finished with the homework and studying for that day. After 2 packets, 3 worksheets, one essay, and a couple of tests tomorrow, kids finally finish their daily tasks. The next day, kids come into school exhausted from the lack of sleep that they get. Many things go into kids getting a lack of sleep. School starts at 8. Many kids need to wake up at 6 to be ready for early morning, with usually starts at 7:30. This means in order to get a full 8 hours of sleep, they need to be asleep by at least 9:30. Some people don’t even get home until around 9, leaving them only a little bit of time to finish homework. After school activities, chores and homework leaves kids only a little bit of time to finish everything they have to do.
Across the generations of my family, I see a trend towards both a higher education and a higher salary as generations are born. The oldest generation I was able to find information on was just two poor uneducated farmers. The next generation was a majority of farmers and other low salary jobs. They also had a majority of grade school educations. But on my Mother’s side some of my relatives began to get high school educations. With this education they became a store owner, tool and die maker, and a railroad engineer. All representing that a higher education can lead to a more successful life. The third generation of my family tree was a majority of average working class individuals who the majority of had a high school education at best. The
Greetings everyone, I'm Nordia. I've lived in Florida all my life, but recently moved to Orlando for school. This is my second year at Valencia and I am studying Philosophy, Psychology, and Political Science. My interests include diplomacy, adventures, music, growth, and that electric sky! After the upcoming Campaigns I hope to join the U.S. military and enter the field of civil affairs.
The purpose of education to me is freedom and have a happy, comfortable life. I was told by whole family that with education can help you to be anyone and go anywhere. It was also support by one of the most influential chiefs of the Navajo people, Chief Manuelito who said, “Grandchildren education is the ladder.” Every time I hear that quote, I understood that education is a tool to get you a good life or to go somewhere. My family wasn’t wealthy and struggle with the bills and my parent told me if they completed or went to college they will be living a more comfortable life. In my opinion, they taught me to be grateful of the things they gave me and to understand that I can’t have everything I wanted. With their support, my sister and I was determined to get good grades and work hard with our school work. Even in college I will keep that determination that I had in high school. So, I can get that diploma and start living a comfortable life or still pursue a higher degree.
Being a first generation United States citizen in my family, I have experienced both sides of the spectrum where my mother’s mere presence symbolizes a near sacrifice of life for a better quality of mine and work is valued over education. Sounds pretty strange when you think about it because most first generation stories you hear include an overbearing parent that values education over everything else. While my mother does value education, I never posed a need for guidance in that aspect until my junior year of high school but by that time my mother had grown accustomed to me being so independent. My mother in a way had given up on me. She found my struggle with mental health too much of a culture shock for her and consequently treated it as a burden whenever I needed support. I would go weeks without going to school because my depression was too unbearable and I was at the point where suicidal ideations were the norm for me. However, this didn’t phase her in the slightest. Attendance wasn’t something I grew up accustomed to. I
You stumble across the finish line with a time that deeply disappoints you. You beat yourself up mentally, regretting the sleep you missed out on the previous night. The next day you get a grade back from a challenging exam a week before. You’re disappointed. Worry, anxiety and frustration arise while thinking about making it through college in the near future. You're failing grade at the moment seems to be the priority and is deeming complete control over all your emotions. The world sets an almost impossible standard for your looks, performance, and the way one another reflects their personality. But at the midst of all setbacks and disappointments, you have to take a step back and wonder…what truly matters?
The worth of education has somehow become less. Is it because people think their "social lives" will be hindered by the unlawful time they must give up to read these so called leaves with ancient inscriptions on them? Do they feel that education is beneath them, that if they were to even try to expand their minds; they would be deemed an outcast? The answers to these questions lies in society.
There is a myriad of reasons which explain why students become sleep deprived during the school timings. For example, students are busy and have to juggle many things like jobs, extracurricular activities, chores, and homework after school (Epstein and Mardon, 2). With all these obligations, people cannot possibly expect students to get to bed on time and receive the needed nine hours of sleep. Even if they could finish their duties early, they are teenagers after all and want to have fun rather than habitually carrying out their perfunctory duties. When they have free time, they go to