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The private schools in my area do have many obnoxious kids but they are trying to get rid of them and to diversifyherschal wrote:I like privet schools. They get all of the rich obnoxious fuckers out of my school so they can go sniff their own farts without cluttering up my hallways. That being said though, I go to one of the top ranked public schools in my state and there are still plenty on rich obnoxious fucks in my hallways.
Irregular verbs ftwInkL0sed wrote:In other words:
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Wow.Neoteny wrote:Irregular verbs ftwInkL0sed wrote:In other words:
sailorseal wrote: D) "Learnt" is not a word
JESUS SAVES!!!PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
A,b,c: Stop embarrassing yourself. You clearly also have no reading comprehension. Read my post again. Try to actually understand what it is I said.sailorseal wrote:Wow.Neoteny wrote:Irregular verbs ftwInkL0sed wrote:In other words:
OK so here we go:
A) He did not mean it literally but he was just saying that there are a ton of Jews in NY and there are
B) The Jewish schools are looking for non-Jewish children
C) I do go to private school
D) "Learnt" is not a word
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/learntWhat is the difference between 'learnt' and 'learned'?
These are alternative forms of the past tense and past participle of the verb learn. Learnt is more common in British English, and learned in American English. There are a number of verbs of this type (burn, dream, kneel, lean, leap, spell, spill, spoil etc.). They are all irregular verbs, and this is a part of their irregularity.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/learntlearnt
One entry found.
Main Entry:
learnt Listen to the pronunciation of learnt
Pronunciation:
\ˈlərnt\
chiefly British past and past participle of learn
learnt (lûrnt) Pronunciation Key
v. A past tense and a past participle of learn.
Glad to see your 'top ranked public school' is teaching you how to express yourself without resorting to the usual inate security of the great unwashed...that of using bad language and not being able to spell correctly.herschal wrote:I like privet schools. They get all of the rich obnoxious fuckers out of my school so they can go sniff their own farts without cluttering up my hallways. That being said though, I go to one of the top ranked public schools in my state and there are still plenty on rich obnoxious fucks in my hallways.
We don't have any Jewish schools within 100 miles of here, so I would not know. We do have Roman Catholic schools and the scholarships they offer are chances to get all your relatives and friends to buy stuff (groceries, etc.) from retailers who will give a percentage to the schools. Great for those with large families, not so much others.LYR wrote:They take the ones with money, or for religious private schools (at least the Jewish ones), anybody who wants to go, who is Jewish (really good with scholarships)...
The closest to that here would either be charter schools (fully public schools that are allowed to specialize) or the fully private parent cooperative schools (exact methods vary, but parents help out with the school in exchange for a much reduced tuition ... parental involvement is usually not just about money, though, its also about being involved with the kids).darth emperor wrote:Here in spain (I dunno if other countries also do, I think they do) there not only private and public schools but also there are like "Coordinate Schools" that is half private half public (the % can change) I went till 10th to this type of school is quite nice, maybe you can call it the private school that can joined everyone that pays it and because is not expensive as a private more people can afford it, in 11th i went to a public one and I can say that the biggest change i can see from this two, is the formality level in education some subject were better public and more of them was better the "coordinate"
lolFruitcake wrote:Glad to see your 'top ranked public school' is teaching you how to express yourself without resorting to the usual inate security of the great unwashed...that of using bad language and not being able to spell correctly.herschal wrote:I like privet schools. They get all of the rich obnoxious fuckers out of my school so they can go sniff their own farts without cluttering up my hallways. That being said though, I go to one of the top ranked public schools in my state and there are still plenty on rich obnoxious fucks in my hallways.

The British celebrate their class system. Americans like to pretend we don't really have one, but in many ways there is not that much differance in this.Mr Changsha wrote:About 5% of British kids don't attend a state school and I would think about 2% actually attended a 'real' public school. In the sense that it sets you apart, this is a benefit not to be underestimated in the UK. However, the system does produce a lot of 'Hooray Henry' types. Arrogance, a sense of entitlement, a certain willingness to label others 'plebs' and such like doesn't appeal much to me beyond the odd joke between friends.
I, clearly, cannot read. May someone please explain to me what I have missed? I am honestly still confused.InkL0sed wrote:In other words:
Yeah, Iz Man, excellent post... wherever it is...Bovver boy wrote:Perfectly summed up iz man.
Why do you say that? I have a terrible memory and I did better in private high school than I did in public middle school.CrazyAnglican wrote:The private school is just set up to work well for kids who will sit in their desks and soak up knowledge.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
I agree privates are almost always the superior option for anyonejohn9blue wrote:Yeah, Iz Man, excellent post... wherever it is...Bovver boy wrote:Perfectly summed up iz man.![]()
Why do you say that? I have a terrible memory and I did better in private high school than I did in public middle school.CrazyAnglican wrote:The private school is just set up to work well for kids who will sit in their desks and soak up knowledge.
Wish I lived in your district...CrazyAnglican wrote:I'm certainly not rich. For my kids we've selected a private school for my eldest. She began there and loves it (although she's hating the homework load at the moment). We pay for her to go to a school that she likes and experience the best education she can. My son went to the same private school for one year, and they were completely unprepared for him. He had the same K-4 teacher that my daughter had, she's a dynamite teacher, but his challenges made him less than an ideal fit for the school. We've started him in the public school system in which I'm employed, and he's doing great. He gets a much different experience than my daughter does, but it's the right fit for him. In our case it's the public school system that has the better funding, and as such we think that he's getting the best education that we can provide for him as well. The private school is just set up to work well for kids who will sit in their desks and soak up knowledge. That's not everyobdy; my son has to get in and mess things up, so he can understand them and put them back together.
Many kids do thatPLAYER57832 wrote:Wish I lived in your district...CrazyAnglican wrote:I'm certainly not rich. For my kids we've selected a private school for my eldest. She began there and loves it (although she's hating the homework load at the moment). We pay for her to go to a school that she likes and experience the best education she can. My son went to the same private school for one year, and they were completely unprepared for him. He had the same K-4 teacher that my daughter had, she's a dynamite teacher, but his challenges made him less than an ideal fit for the school. We've started him in the public school system in which I'm employed, and he's doing great. He gets a much different experience than my daughter does, but it's the right fit for him. In our case it's the public school system that has the better funding, and as such we think that he's getting the best education that we can provide for him as well. The private school is just set up to work well for kids who will sit in their desks and soak up knowledge. That's not everyobdy; my son has to get in and mess things up, so he can understand them and put them back together.![]()
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My son gets in trouble if he wiggles too much in his seat (disruptive), stares out a window (disrespectful, even if he can answer everything the teacher is saying). We wondered why he scored so much better on books he read at hom (2-3 times as difficult as the ones at school)... turns out he was not even reading them! and the teacher never noticed.
Reminds me of my elementary school.PLAYER57832 wrote:Wish I lived in your district...CrazyAnglican wrote:I'm certainly not rich. For my kids we've selected a private school for my eldest. She began there and loves it (although she's hating the homework load at the moment). We pay for her to go to a school that she likes and experience the best education she can. My son went to the same private school for one year, and they were completely unprepared for him. He had the same K-4 teacher that my daughter had, she's a dynamite teacher, but his challenges made him less than an ideal fit for the school. We've started him in the public school system in which I'm employed, and he's doing great. He gets a much different experience than my daughter does, but it's the right fit for him. In our case it's the public school system that has the better funding, and as such we think that he's getting the best education that we can provide for him as well. The private school is just set up to work well for kids who will sit in their desks and soak up knowledge. That's not everyobdy; my son has to get in and mess things up, so he can understand them and put them back together.![]()
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My son gets in trouble if he wiggles too much in his seat (disruptive), stares out a window (disrespectful, even if he can answer everything the teacher is saying). We wondered why he scored so much better on books he read at hom (2-3 times as difficult as the ones at school)... turns out he was not even reading them! and the teacher never noticed.