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SW-User
I agree with you, NameIsMailbox. I think we're both saying that developing the ability to learn goes a long way. This is crucial, as is navigating the social experiment of school. What you learn in the classroom can be as valuable as what you learn outside the classroom and both are fallible sources. Just as you learn irrelevant and often skewed information in classrooms, so too do you hear some very unhealthy messages in the hallways.
The best advice I can give to anyone is, pay attention. In class, out of class, on the field, in a theater, at home, everywhere. We can be told anything, but it's what we synthesize and reason for ourselves that will make all the difference.
(and if you learned 2+2=4 in math, you got more out of it than I did.) ;)
The best advice I can give to anyone is, pay attention. In class, out of class, on the field, in a theater, at home, everywhere. We can be told anything, but it's what we synthesize and reason for ourselves that will make all the difference.
(and if you learned 2+2=4 in math, you got more out of it than I did.) ;)