I think so.
Thomas Edison went to school for three monthes
Thomas Edison was actually a wealthy family
Thomas Edison was poor when he was a kid. His parents barely had enough money to send him to school. Thomas Edison's mom home schooled him.
in the middle
Yes, Thomas Edison was reportedly boxed on the ears by his teacher as a child. This incident occurred because Edison was deemed disruptive and was thought to be a poor student. The experience had a profound effect on him, leading his mother to withdraw him from school and educate him at home, which nurtured his inventive spirit.
he was rich after he made the lightbulb but poor before
No, Thomas Edison did not have good grades in school. He struggled with formal education and was considered a poor student by his teachers. Despite this, he went on to become one of the greatest inventors in history.
cause he wanted 2 gezz leave this poor man alone
Thomas Alva Edison could not hear with one of his ears, because he was part deaf. The question arises- why Edison, with thousands of brilliant discoveries to his credit did not invent a hearing aid for himself? The answer was simple. He himself answered it. If someone is partly deaf, people will have to talk to him in a very loud voice. That means lies cannot be told to him, for fear of others learning that someone is telling lies to that poor deaf person. True, we cannot shout lies. Edison himself said that he was somewhat deaf and lucky, so that he had not have to hear any lies from anyone.
Thomas Edison started attending school at the age of seven in 1855. However, he was considered a poor student and his mother ended up homeschooling him after he was expelled for causing a classroom explosion.
Thomas Edison had many assistants. Many of these poor men actually invented the items he later patented. This was a fairly common practice at the time. The idea that Edison estenially owned these employees and therefore the patents tells us a great deal of the time.
Thomas Edison had only three months of formal schooling, as his mother taught him at home. He was primarily self-educated and credited his mother for instilling in him a love of learning. Edison later said he was "always a poor student and was never good at learning from books."