Not unless you are referring to a specific school.
The general rule is: only capitalize nouns if you are substituting the noun for a name. Example:
"Many cities are busy" v. "New York City is busy"
"Not all dads like Baseball" v. "Who has seen Dad's baseball glove?"
Yes, "graduate school" should be capitalized when referring to a specific program or institution within a sentence, just like any other proper noun. For example: "I am considering applying to Graduate School A next semester."
No, "dad" should not be capitalized in the middle of a sentence unless it begins a sentence or is used as part of a proper noun, like a title.
Only at the beginning of a sentence. It is a place, but it's like "school." You don't capitalize "school" when it's in the middle of a sentence.
The correct punctuation for the sentence "In September you and him get to start going to middle school" would be: "In September, you and he get to start going to middle school."
No, in general, you would not capitalize the word "language" unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a proper noun.
No, unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a proper noun (e.g., Elementary School ABC).
Only at the beginning of a sentence. It is a place, but it's like "school." You don't capitalize "school" when it's in the middle of a sentence.
You don't capitalize it except if it is the beginning of a sentence
No, "dad" should not be capitalized in the middle of a sentence unless it begins a sentence or is used as part of a proper noun, like a title.
2011, from middle school
Middle school graduate
Jackson creek middle school
Eventually, sure. They will just have to finish Middle School, graduate high school, graduate college, graduate law school, pass the bar exam and then they can be a lawyer.
yeah
2015
2017 in middle school and 2021
2017 in middle school and 2021
it's like graduating elementary school- you are just a bit older.