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Dont like going school is any disorder is this ? If yes how to solve it?

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Dont like going school is any disorder is this ? If yes how to solve it?

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  1. your disorder is being a lazy kid.

    dont worry most kids have this.


  2. nah its not, it just means your lazy

  3. This disorder is called being a child.

    It is solved by understanding that there are things that you MUST do, even when you are an adult, and that you need to work on your attitude so that even if you don't enjoty something, you can at least tolerate it without causing problems for other people.

    In other words, you need to gain som maturity.  Part of growing up is learning to understand that some things you HAVE to do, like paying taxes.  Nobody likes it, but it still has to be done.

    Going to schoo  is your "job", until such time as you graduate.  Thjen, you need to get a real job!  You tink it's bad now, people always telling you what to do?  Wait until you are employeed -- not only will they tell you waht to do, but they FIRE you if you don't do it.  When you're fired, that means no money, no car, no house, no food.  

    So as an adult you learn to do what your told, when you're told, and you learn to do it without complaining.

  4. You need to go to school.  Your grammar sucks.

  5. No, it is not a disorder. You just have a better sense of what you want than most other people.

    Society in general wants to send us to cookie-cutter schools where we all learn generally the same things in generally the same way (sitting in a classroom listening to a teacher or learning from one textbook as opposed to studying on our own and using multiple sources that interest us). And they want us all to come out the same way so we will fit in the society we have made for ourselves.

    This works well for most people.

    I was like you, though. I hated everything about my school. I hated it so much I talked my parents into letting me live with some friends of theirs across the state so I could attend the Charter School their daughters attended. I think it saved me from insanity, or at the very least from being a high school dropout. Oh, and the school was considered a public school, which meant I didn't have to pay to attend. Many alternative schools are the same way.

    At the charter school we didn't have classes, except optional math since most of the kids didn't like trying to figure out math on their own. We still had to get credits for History, Science, Phys Ed, etc. But we chose how we would learn. For example, up until the charter school I don't remember a single thing about any History lesson I was taught. While I was in the charter school I read a couple books on history that did interest me (and I still remember the info that I read), and I wrote up a summary for partial history credits for each. Also, for writing the summary I received partial English credits for each summary. Some of us students went on a trip to a couple local museums with a teacher and some parents. Those of us who weren't there just goofing off but actually participating received history credit- no report needed, just a short Q & A with our homeroom teacher to tell what we learned. I played Ultimate Frisbee each weekend with friends, and my "mom" signed my Phys Ed time sheet for those games, and that's an example of how I got Phys Ed credits. For band I started out at the local high school, and later auditioned for the nearby State University and was accepted, so I took college band for free through PSEO.

    You should consider looking into alternative schools in your area. Even if you have to drive yourself or ride public transit for an hour each way, it can be so worth it if regular school has you banging your head on walls.

    There are different types of alternative schools (including home schooling, if your parents are up to it), and you should do some research before you enroll at one. I did not because I was so eager to get out of "normal" school and I jumped on the first different school i heard of. It nearly set me back a couple years. I was not a self-motivated person, which you needed to be at this highly unstructured school. I spent my first year there reading books (I finished my reading requirements in my first year there) and quietly wasting my time. I would've done better at a more structured alternative school, but somehow I managed to graduate at 18. (If I could have gotten my act together I could have easily graduated a year or year and a half early!)

    You aren't broken, you just need more room to learn than what your school is giving you. Do yourself a favor and look into any alternative schools around. It could save your sanity!

    Best of luck!

  6. no disorder , learn to like it , that will help

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