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January 2005
(I wrote this
talk for a high school. I never actually gave it, because the school authorities
vetoed the plan to invite me.)
When I said I was speaking at a high
school, my friends were curious. What will you say to high school students? So I
asked them, what do you wish someone had told you in high school? Their answers
were remarkably similar. So I'm going to tell you what we all wish someone had
told us.
I'll start by telling you something you don't have to know in
high school: what you want to do with your life. People are always asking you
this, so you think you're supposed to have an answer. But adults ask this mainly
as a conversation starter. They want to know what sort of person you are, and
this question is just to get you talking. They ask it the way you might poke a
hermit crab in a tide pool, to see what it does.
If I were back in high
school and someone asked about my plans, I'd say that my first priority was to
learn what the options were. You don't need to be in a rush to choose your
life's work. What you need to do is discover what you like. You have to work on
stuff you like if you want to be good at what you do.
It might seem that
nothing would be easier than deciding what you like, but it turns out to be
hard, partly because it's hard to get an accurate picture of most jobs. Being a
doctor is not the way it's portrayed on TV. Fortunately you can also watch real
doctors, by volunteering in hospitals. [1]
But there are other jobs you
can't learn about, because no one is doing them yet. Most of the work I've done
in the last ten years didn't exist when I was in high school. The world changes
fast, and the rate at which it changes is itself speeding up. In such a world
it's not a good idea to have fixed plans.
And yet every May, speakers all
over the country fire up the Standard Graduation Speech, the theme of which is:
don't give up on your dreams. I know what they mean, but this is a bad way to
put it, because it implies you're supposed to be bound by some plan you made
early on. The computer world has a name for this: premature optimization. And it
is synonymous with disaster. These speakers would do better to say simply, don't
give up.
What they really mean is, don't get demoralized. Don't think
that you can't do what other people can. And I agree you shouldn't underestimate
your potential. People who've done great things tend to seem as if they were a
race apart. And most biographies only exaggerate this illusion, partly due to
the worshipful attitude biographers inevitably sink into, and partly because,
knowing how the story ends, they can't help streamlining the plot till it seems
like the subject's life was a matter of destiny, the mere unfolding of some
innate genius. In fact I suspect if you had the sixteen year old Shakespeare or
Einstein in school with you, they'd seem impressive, but not totally unlike your
other friends.
Which is an uncomfortable thought. If they were just like
us, then they had to work very hard to do what they did. And that's one reason
we like to believe in genius. It gives us an excuse for being lazy. If these
guys were able to do what they did only because of some magic Shakespeareness or
Einsteinness, then it's not our fault if we can't do something as
good.
I'm not saying there's no such thing as genius. But if you're
trying to choose between two theories and one gives you an excuse for being
lazy, the other one is probably right.
So far we've cut the Standard
Graduation Speech down from "don't give up on your dreams" to "what someone else
can do, you can do." But it needs to be cut still further. There is some
variation in natural ability. Most people overestimate its role, but it does
exist. If I were talking to a guy four feet tall whose ambition was to play in
the NBA, I'd feel pretty stupid saying, you can do anything if you really try.
[2]
We need to cut the Standard Graduation Speech down to, "what someone
else with your abilities can do, you can do; and don't underestimate your
abilities." But as so often happens, the closer you get to the truth, the
messier your sentence gets. We've taken a nice, neat (but wrong) slogan, and
churned it up like a mud puddle. It doesn't make a very good speech anymore. But
worse still, it doesn't tell you what to do anymore. Someone with your
abilities? What are your abilities?
Upwind
I think the
solution is to work in the other direction. Instead of working back from a goal,
work forward from promising situations. This is what most successful people
actually do anyway.
In the graduation-speech approach, you decide where
you want to be in twenty years, and then ask: what should I do now to get there?
I propose instead that you don't commit to anything in the future, but just look
at the options available now, and choose those that will give you the most
promising range of options afterward.
It's not so important what you work
on, so long as you're not wasting your time. Work on things that interest you
and increase your options, and worry later about which you'll
take.
Suppose you're a college freshman deciding whether to major in math
or economics. Well, math will give you more options: you can go into almost any
field from math. If you major in math it will be easy to get into grad school in
economics, but if you major in economics it will be hard to get into grad school
in math.
Flying a glider is a good metaphor here. Because a glider
doesn't have an engine, you can't fly into the wind without losing a lot of
altitude. If you let yourself get far downwind of good places to land, your
options narrow uncomfortably. As a rule you want to stay upwind. So I propose
that as a replacement for "don't give up on your dreams." Stay
upwind.
How do you do that, though? Even if math is upwind of economics,
how are you supposed to know that as a high school student?
Well, you
don't, and that's what you need to find out. Look for smart
people and hard problems. Smart people tend to clump together, and if you can
find such a clump, it's probably worthwhile to join it. But it's not
straightforward to find these, because there is a lot of faking going
on.
To a newly arrived undergraduate, all university departments look
much the same. The professors all seem forbiddingly intellectual and publish
papers unintelligible to outsiders. But while in some fields the papers are
unintelligible because they're full of hard ideas, in others they're
deliberately written in an obscure way to seem as if they're saying something
important. This may seem a scandalous proposition, but it has been
experimentally verified, in the famous Social Text affair. Suspecting
that the papers published by literary theorists were often just
intellectual-sounding nonsense, a physicist deliberately wrote a paper full of
intellectual-sounding nonsense, and submitted it to a literary theory journal,
which published it.
The best protection is always to be working on hard
problems. Writing novels is hard. Reading novels isn't. Hard means worry: if
you're not worrying that something you're making will come out badly, or that
you won't be able to understand something you're studying, then it isn't hard
enough. There has to be suspense.
Well, this seems a grim view of the
world, you may think. What I'm telling you is that you should worry? Yes, but
it's not as bad as it sounds. It's exhilarating to overcome worries. You don't
see faces much happier than people winning gold medals. And you know why they're
so happy? Relief.
I'm not saying this is the only way to be happy. Just
that some kinds of worry are not as bad as they
sound.
Ambition
In practice, "stay upwind" reduces to "work
on hard problems." And you can start today. I wish I'd grasped that in high
school.
Most people like to be good at what they do. In the so-called
real world this need is a powerful force. But high school students rarely
benefit from it, because they're given a fake thing to do. When I was in high
school, I let myself believe that my job was to be a high school student. And so
I let my need to be good at what I did be satisfied by merely doing well in
school.
If you'd asked me in high school what the difference was between
high school kids and adults, I'd have said it was that adults had to earn a
living. Wrong. It's that adults take responsibility for themselves. Making a
living is only a small part of it. Far more important is to take intellectual
responsibility for oneself.
If I had to go through high school again, I'd
treat it like a day job. I don't mean that I'd slack in school. Working at
something as a day job doesn't mean doing it badly. It means not being defined
by it. I mean I wouldn't think of myself as a high school student, just as a
musician with a day job as a waiter doesn't think of himself as a waiter. [3]
And when I wasn't working at my day job I'd start trying to do real
work.
When I ask people what they regret most about high school, they
nearly all say the same thing: that they wasted so much time. If you're
wondering what you're doing now that you'll regret most later, that's probably
it. [4]
Some people say this is inevitable-- that high school students
aren't capable of getting anything done yet. But I don't think this is true. And
the proof is that you're bored. You probably weren't bored when you were eight.
When you're eight it's called "playing" instead of "hanging out," but it's the
same thing. And when I was eight, I was rarely bored. Give me a back yard and a
few other kids and I could play all day.
The reason this got stale in
middle school and high school, I now realize, is that I was ready for something
else. Childhood was getting old.
I'm not saying you shouldn't hang out
with your friends-- that you should all become humorless little robots who do
nothing but work. Hanging out with friends is like chocolate cake. You enjoy it
more if you eat it occasionally than if you eat nothing but chocolate cake for
every meal. No matter how much you like chocolate cake, you'll be pretty queasy
after the third meal of it. And that's what the malaise one feels in high school
is: mental queasiness. [5]
You may be thinking, we have to do more than
get good grades. We have to have extracurricular activities. But you know
perfectly well how bogus most of these are. Collecting donations for a charity
is an admirable thing to do, but it's not hard. It's not getting
something done. What I mean by getting something done is learning how to write
well, or how to program computers, or what life was really like in preindustrial
societies, or how to draw the human face from life. This sort of thing rarely
translates into a line item on a college
application.
Corruption
It's dangerous to design your life
around getting into college, because the people you have to impress to get into
college are not a very discerning audience. At most colleges, it's not the
professors who decide whether you get in, but admissions officers, and they are
nowhere near as smart. They're the NCOs of the intellectual world. They can't
tell how smart you are. The mere existence of prep schools is proof of
that.
Few parents would pay so much for their kids to go to a school that
didn't improve their admissions prospects. Prep schools openly say this is one
of their aims. But what that means, if you stop to think about it, is that they
can hack the admissions process: that they can take the very same kid and make
him seem a more appealing candidate than he would if he went to the local public
school. [6]
Right now most of you feel your job in life is to be a
promising college applicant. But that means you're designing your life to
satisfy a process so mindless that there's a whole industry devoted to
subverting it. No wonder you become cynical. The malaise you feel is the same
that a producer of reality TV shows or a tobacco industry executive feels. And
you don't even get paid a lot.
So what do you do? What you should not do
is rebel. That's what I did, and it was a mistake. I didn't realize exactly what
was happening to us, but I smelled a major rat. And so I just gave up. Obviously
the world sucked, so why bother?
When I discovered that one of our
teachers was herself using Cliff's Notes, it seemed par for the course. Surely
it meant nothing to get a good grade in such a class.
In retrospect this
was stupid. It was like someone getting fouled in a soccer game and saying, hey,
you fouled me, that's against the rules, and walking off the field in
indignation. Fouls happen. The thing to do when you get fouled is not to lose
your cool. Just keep playing.
By
putting you in this situation, society has fouled you. Yes, as you suspect, a
lot of the stuff you learn in your classes is crap. And yes, as you suspect, the
college admissions process is largely a charade. But like many fouls, this one
was unintentional. [7] So just keep playing.
Rebellion is almost as
stupid as obedience. In either case you let yourself be defined by what they
tell you to do. The best plan, I think, is to step onto an orthogonal vector.
Don't just do what they tell you, and don't just refuse to. Instead treat school
as a day job. As day jobs go, it's pretty sweet. You're done at 3 o'clock, and
you can even work on your own stuff while you're
there.
Curiosity
And what's your real job supposed to be?
Unless you're Mozart, your first task is to figure that out. What are the great
things to work on? Where are the imaginative people? And most importantly, what
are you interested in? The word "aptitude" is misleading, because it implies
something innate. The most powerful sort of aptitude is a consuming interest in
some question, and such interests are often acquired tastes.
A distorted
version of this idea has filtered into popular culture under the name "passion."
I recently saw an ad for waiters saying they wanted people with a "passion for
service." The real thing is not something one could have for waiting on tables.
And passion is a bad word for it. A better name would be curiosity.
Kids
are curious, but the curiosity I mean has a different shape from kid curiosity.
Kid curiosity is broad and shallow; they ask why at random about everything. In
most adults this curiosity dries up entirely. It has to: you can't get anything
done if you're always asking why about everything. But in ambitious adults,
instead of drying up, curiosity becomes narrow and deep. The mud flat morphs
into a well.
Curiosity turns work into play. For Einstein, relativity
wasn't a book full of hard stuff he had to learn for an exam. It was a mystery
he was trying to solve. So it probably felt like less work to him to invent it
than it would seem to someone now to learn it in a class.
One of the most
dangerous illusions you get from school is the idea that doing great things
requires a lot of discipline. Most subjects are taught in such a boring way that
it's only by discipline that you can flog yourself through them. So I was
surprised when, early in college, I read a quote by Wittgenstein saying that he
had no self-discipline and had never been able to deny himself anything, not
even a cup of coffee.
Now I know a number of people who do great work,
and it's the same with all of them. They have little discipline. They're all
terrible procrastinators and find it almost impossible to make themselves do
anything they're not interested in. One still hasn't sent out his half of the
thank-you notes from his wedding, four years ago. Another has 26,000 emails in
her inbox.
I'm not saying you can get away with zero self-discipline. You
probably need about the amount you need to go running. I'm often reluctant to go
running, but once I do, I enjoy it. And if I don't run for several days, I feel
ill. It's the same with people who do great things. They know they'll feel bad
if they don't work, and they have enough discipline to get themselves to their
desks to start working. But once they get started, interest takes over, and
discipline is no longer necessary.
Do you think Shakespeare was gritting
his teeth and diligently trying to write Great Literature? Of course not. He was
having fun. That's why he's so good.
If you want to do good work, what
you need is a great curiosity about a promising question. The critical moment
for Einstein was when he looked at Maxwell's equations and said, what the hell
is going on here?
It can take years to zero in on a productive question,
because it can take years to figure out what a subject is really about. To take
an extreme example, consider math. Most people think they hate math, but the
boring stuff you do in school under the name "mathematics" is not at all like
what mathematicians do.
The great mathematician G. H. Hardy said he
didn't like math in high school either. He only took it up because he was better
at it than the other students. Only later did he realize math was interesting--
only later did he start to ask questions instead of merely answering them
correctly.
When a friend of mine used to grumble because he had to write
a paper for school, his mother would tell him: find a way to make it
interesting. That's what you need to do: find a question that makes the world
interesting. People who do great things look at the same world everyone else
does, but notice some odd detail that's compellingly mysterious.
And not
only in intellectual matters. Henry Ford's great question was, why do cars have
to be a luxury item? What would happen if you treated them as a commodity? Franz
Beckenbauer's was, in effect, why does everyone have to stay in his position?
Why can't defenders score goals too?
Now
If it takes years
to articulate great questions, what do you do now, at sixteen? Work toward
finding one. Great questions don't appear suddenly. They gradually congeal in
your head. And what makes them congeal is experience. So the way to find great
questions is not to search for them-- not to wander about thinking, what great
discovery shall I make? You can't answer that; if you could, you'd have made
it.
The way to get a big idea to appear in your head is not to hunt for
big ideas, but to put in a lot of time on work that interests you, and in the
process keep your mind open enough that a big idea can take roost. Einstein,
Ford, and Beckenbauer all used this recipe. They all knew their work like a
piano player knows the keys. So when something seemed amiss to them, they had
the confidence to notice it.
Put in time how and on what? Just pick a
project that seems interesting: to master some chunk of material, or to make
something, or to answer some question. Choose a project that will take less than
a month, and make it something you have the means to finish. Do something hard
enough to stretch you, but only just, especially at first. If you're deciding
between two projects, choose whichever seems most fun. If one blows up in your
face, start another. Repeat till, like an internal combustion engine, the
process becomes self-sustaining, and each project generates the next one. (This
could take years.)
It may be just as well not to do a project "for
school," if that will restrict you or make it seem like work. Involve your
friends if you want, but not too many, and only if they're not flakes. Friends
offer moral support (few startups are started by one person), but secrecy also
has its advantages. There's something pleasing about a secret project. And you
can take more risks, because no one will know if you fail.
Don't worry if
a project doesn't seem to be on the path to some goal you're supposed to have.
Paths can bend a lot more than you think. So let the path grow out the project.
The most important thing is to be excited about it, because it's by doing that
you learn.
Don't disregard unseemly motivations. One of the most powerful
is the desire to be better than other people at something. Hardy said that's
what got him started, and I think the only unusual thing about him is that he
admitted it. Another powerful motivator is the desire to do, or know, things
you're not supposed to. Closely related is the desire to do something audacious.
Sixteen year olds aren't supposed to write novels. So if you try, anything you
achieve is on the plus side of the ledger; if you fail utterly, you're doing no
worse than expectations. [8]
Beware of bad models. Especially when they
excuse laziness. When I was in high school I used to write "existentialist"
short stories like ones I'd seen by famous writers. My stories didn't have a lot
of plot, but they were very deep. And they were less work to write than
entertaining ones would have been. I should have known that was a danger sign.
And in fact I found my stories pretty boring; what excited me was the idea of
writing serious, intellectual stuff like the famous writers.
Now I have
enough experience to realize that those famous writers actually sucked. Plenty
of famous people do; in the short term, the quality of one's work is only a
small component of fame. I should have been less worried about doing something
that seemed cool, and just done something I liked. That's the actual road to
coolness anyway.
A key ingredient in many projects, almost a project on
its own, is to find good books. Most books are bad. Nearly all textbooks are
bad. [9] So don't assume a subject is to be learned from whatever book on it
happens to be closest. You have to search actively for the tiny number of good
books.
The important thing is to get out there and do stuff. Instead of
waiting to be taught, go out and learn.
Your life doesn't have to be
shaped by admissions officers. It could be shaped by your own curiosity. It is
for all ambitious adults. And you don't have to wait to start. In fact, you
don't have to wait to be an adult. There's no switch inside you that magically
flips when you turn a certain age or graduate from some institution. You start
being an adult when you decide to take responsibility for your life. You can do
that at any age. [10]
This may sound like bullshit. I'm just a minor, you
may think, I have no money, I have to live at home, I have to do what adults
tell me all day long. Well, most adults labor under restrictions just as
cumbersome, and they manage to get things done. If you think it's restrictive
being a kid, imagine having kids.
The only real difference between adults
and high school kids is that adults realize they need to get things done, and
high school kids don't. That realization hits most people around 23. But I'm
letting you in on the secret early. So get to work. Maybe you can be the first
generation whose greatest regret from high school isn't how much time you
wasted.
Notes
[1] A doctor friend warns
that even this can give an inaccurate picture. "Who knew how much time it would
take up, how little autonomy one would have for endless years of training, and
how unbelievably annoying it is to carry a beeper?"
[2] His best bet
would probably be to become dictator and intimidate the NBA into letting him
play. So far the closest anyone has come is Secretary of Labor.
[3] A day
job is one you take to pay the bills so you can do what you really want, like
play in a band, or invent relativity.
Treating high school as a day job
might actually make it easier for some students to get good grades. If you treat
your classes as a game, you won't be demoralized if they seem
pointless.
However bad your classes, you need to get good grades in them
to get into a decent college. And that is worth doing, because
universities are where a lot of the clumps of smart people are these
days.
[4] The second biggest regret was caring so much about unimportant
things. And especially about what other people thought of them.
I think
what they really mean, in the latter case, is caring what random people thought
of them. Adults care just as much what other people think, but they get to be
more selective about the other people.
I have about thirty friends whose
opinions I care about, and the opinion of the rest of the world barely affects
me. The problem in high school is that your peers are chosen for you by
accidents of age and geography, rather than by you based on respect for their
judgement.
[5] The key to wasting time is distraction. Without
distractions it's too obvious to your brain that you're not doing anything with
it, and you start to feel uncomfortable. If you want to measure how dependent
you've become on distractions, try this experiment: set aside a chunk of time on
a weekend and sit alone and think. You can have a notebook to write your
thoughts down in, but nothing else: no friends, TV, music, phone, IM, email,
Web, games, books, newspapers, or magazines. Within an hour most people will
feel a strong craving for distraction.
[6] I don't mean to imply that the
only function of prep schools is to trick admissions officers. They also
generally provide a better education. But try this thought experiment: suppose
prep schools supplied the same superior education but had a tiny (.001) negative
effect on college admissions. How many parents would still send their kids to
them?
It might also be argued that kids who went to prep schools, because
they've learned more, are better college candidates. But this seems
empirically false. What you learn in even the best high school is rounding error
compared to what you learn in college. Public school kids arrive at college with
a slight disadvantage, but they start to pull ahead in the sophomore
year.
(I'm not saying public school kids are smarter than preppies, just
that they are within any given college. That follows necessarily if you agree
prep schools improve kids' admissions prospects.)
[7] Why does society
foul you? Indifference, mainly. There are simply no outside forces pushing high
school to be good. The air traffic control system works because planes would
crash otherwise. Businesses have to deliver because otherwise competitors would
take their customers. But no planes crash if your school sucks, and it has no
competitors. High school isn't evil; it's random; but random is pretty
bad.
[8] And then of course there is money. It's not a big factor in high
school, because you can't do much that anyone wants. But a lot of great things
were created mainly to make money. Samuel Johnson said "no man but a blockhead
ever wrote except for money." (Many hope he was exaggerating.)
[9] Even
college textbooks are bad. When you get to college, you'll find that (with a few
stellar exceptions) the textbooks are not written by the leading scholars in the
field they describe. Writing college textbooks is unpleasant work, done mostly
by people who need the money. It's unpleasant because the publishers exert so
much control, and there are few things worse than close supervision by someone
who doesn't understand what you're doing. This phenomenon is apparently even worse in the production
of high school textbooks.
[10] Your teachers are always telling you to
behave like adults. I wonder if they'd like it if you did. You may be loud and
disorganized, but you're very docile compared to adults. If you actually started
acting like adults, it would be just as if a bunch of adults had been transposed
into your bodies. Imagine the reaction of an FBI agent or taxi driver or
reporter to being told they had to ask permission to go the bathroom, and only
one person could go at a time. To say nothing of the things you're taught. If a
bunch of actual adults suddenly found themselves trapped in high school, the
first thing they'd do is form a union and renegotiate all the rules with the
administration.
Thanks to Ingrid Bassett, Trevor Blackwell, Rich
Draves, Dan Giffin, Sarah Harlin, Jessica Livingston, Jackie McDonough, Robert
Morris, Mark Nitzberg, Lisa Randall, and Aaron Swartz for reading drafts of
this, and to many others for talking to me about high
school.
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8 comments:
I think that this is a very in-depth speech. A lot of thought was put into it. High School needs to change in order help students "know" this information. I think that teachers need to think at knowledge from an average student's point of view. At this point, they really don't care. Teachers should try to find "fun" ways to explain the subject. I'd say that they need to show a student how it will reflect in their future life. For example: Have like ten pieces of carpet and the students need to pick their favorite one. From then they need to measure their own fake house and find out how much carpet they need for one room and then find the total cost. But the biggest thing is: Don't give them HOMEWORK very often. I think this is where students fall into the don't care mode because some teachers lecture for 45 minute and then asign homework over it and don't give the students very much time to work on it in class and ask questions.
The main thing I wish my high school teachers would have told me at the beginning of my high school career is: "What you are doing at this exact moment, is not the most important thing in your life." For me, my entire high school felt like that, and I found out it wasn't when I realized my final exams were fifty percent of everything I had done in the past six years. The big tests that I was losing sleep over, didn't matter anymore, the one oral exam that made me throw up because I was so nervous was only five percent now. None of my grades really mattered anymore because it all depended on failing or passing my exams. Which of course, caused me to stress even more, but if I knew this in my first year of high school, i probably would have had a much calmer and more pleasant high school experience.
Schools are in a very closed box.
We live inside the box, and often, when we are young, teachers don't put forth the effort to encourage the growth of individual thinking in kids. We are put on the same track to try to keep us as equals. But we aren't. We are all people, but our strengths lie in different areas. And squelching our desire to be outside, or make a project more creative, or bring new ideas and structures to the table- it won't help.
That, I think, is the worst thing to do to young minds if you really want to prepare us for real life. We need to encourage kids to open the box, be outside of the box, not to close the box.
well i think that teachers need to relax and hwelp us learn rather then just throwing it at us the teachers know way more then what we do so it is easy form them to just therough homework at us and tell us to do it but i think if they took there time to actually show us then it would be easyer on us after all i do think teachers are doing a really good job at are scholl of teaching us there knowledge that they have so im just gonna keep learning
well i think that teachers need to relax and hwelp us learn rather then just throwing it at us the teachers know way more then what we do so it is easy form them to just therough homework at us and tell us to do it but i think if they took there time to actually show us then it would be easyer on us after all i do think teachers are doing a really good job at are scholl of teaching us there knowledge that they have so im just gonna keep learning
Many students learn in many different ways. some have the ability to learn by sitting in a class room, others are more hand on. I would rather be a hands on learning guy. thats probalby why im goin to lake area in watertown. teachers should be able to adapt to the many different ways kids learn.
There are quite a few things that I wish I would have known going into high school, or even going into junior year. I wish I would've known how important it actually was to keep ahead of Mrs. Hansen's workload. I wish I would've known that in order to keep organized you must learn to manage your time wisely from the beginning. Not all things have to do with school though. I wish I would've known that I will miss my friends more than I originally planned when I'm gone because they are who I spend most of my fun times with. Not all things are already lost though because most of these things I wish I would've done I can still do. That's the perk of being young. Whether you wish you would've or wish you could've you just need to keep going and do the things that you still can do.
There are a number of things that I wish I would have known going into high school. However, I will say that this year I would have loved to been able to learn and figure out a way to stay ahead in Mrs. Hansen's class so that when I would be gone for something I wouldn't be missing seven assignments and I could have them handed in. Another thing I wish I would have known was that I need to learn how to be better organized for everything that high school has to offer because I will admit that I had a few days where I had no clue where a certain assignment was. I feel that there are a lot of things you need to know, but I also feel that I have learned a number of things as well.
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