80%
40%
They where a uniform. in classic school uniforms...along with Pokemon and their hello-kitty backpacks
John Tyler, along with his fellow students tied their teacher up and locked him in a closet. They did this after their complaints of the teacher's harsh behavior went unanswered by their parents.
If you really knew me?
That depends on if the variable "number of students" is dependent on something else. For example, if the number of students is dependent on the time of year, then it is charted along the y-axis. If the number of students is independent, and the school's yearly expenses are dependent on the number of students, than the number of students should be tracked by the x-axis.
When you finish school - go onto college and realize that they were right all along. Then, only then.
Yes, in March 2012, she was part of a school trip to Oaxaca, Mexico, along with nine other students, and their teachers.
There are several theories about whether parents make good students... most of them negative, and along the lines of "If you have a family, you have less time to devote to school." This is true at times, and some people with children do fail in school. On the other hand, stability matters as well. :) Usually, parents are more stable students, with more motivation to succeed. They might be doing this for their children, or coming back after their children are mostly grown to finish up what they started. ... in the end, it depends on the person. If you believe in yourself, and make education a priority, you can do it. Other people have gotten degrees and managed to keep their families intact at the same time. It definitely can be done. Like anything else worth doing, though, it requires a lot of effort, and sometimes some sacrifice. It is hard to have to study rather than doing things that you would rather do, especially when it involves your children. It is up to the individuals involved whether those temporary sacrifices are worth it.
It was probably a typical high school in the segregated south-- whites only. Built in 1927, it was originally called Little Rock Senior High School. It was large-- in fact, it was known as one of the largest schools in the United States; and it probably sent a number of students to college. But then, in 1957, what was now known as Central High School got into the news when it received the order to desegregate-- a part of the Supreme Court's 1954 ruling (Brown vs. Board of Education) that made segregation illegal. Unfortunately, most of the white students in Arkansas (and in most southern states) had been taught to believe in segregation, and while there may have been a few who secretly supported integration, most went along with what their parents believed. When the students at Central heard that nine black students (called "Negroes" back then) were being bused to their high school, crowds of angry white adults gathered, along with some of the white students who did not want their school to be the focus of controversy. In the end, the National Guard was called in by President Eisenhower, to protect the black students and keep angry whites away from them. Some of the black students were spat upon, pushed, and threatened, just for wanting to go to school there. In the end, the black students did attend, but it was not a pleasant experience for them. And it probably was not very pleasant for the white students either-- the media scrutiny continued for months.
Simply not getting along with your parents in not a valid for emancipation. Many teenagers don't get along with their parents--it's fairly normal.
you can't make your parents get along with your boyfriend, they either get along or they don't
It is called a yearbook or an annual. These books typically feature photographs of students and faculty members from a specific school or district, along with other content such as quotes, events, and memories from the school year.