Author Topic: this boy needs the 411 from high school men  (Read 3271 times)

If you're having trouble making friends, get into sports or volunteering

2017 graduate, literally go to class and everything will pan itself out. Hell, I took one day off a month cause i forgetin hated it and I still pulled through great. There's a chance you wont find any teachers you truly like until Junior-Senior year where the teachers (at least in my school) get way less bitchy as you move up. Take computer science classes BUT stay away from principle classes if you already know what you're doing, as it's literally a programming class for average joes.. uh.. have fun, sit tight. you're basically waiting until it's over.

is this advice or a science joke
a little of both

dont blow off class material if you want to go to college, other than that high school is a time where you find out more about yourself and other people since people's characters start seriously diverging around this point. you may find old friends don't become the kind of people you want to be friends with, and you'll have to accept that and find new people

its not impossible to hang onto high school friends past college, esp if you get really close. best friends take on a new definition from high school and beyond.

can't tell if this is supposed to be serious or not

Well, it is possible to actually bullstuff your way through high school while still putting in some effort but it's not for everyone. Really my advice for you is to not kiss anyone's ass not even your teacher's but appreciate any help you can get. Don't go around trying to be friends with everyone. And even though AP exams can be quite costly take as many as you can get because they can exempt you from some college requirements that you might have to do if you didn't take them. Another thing I'll say is explore all of your financial aid options early too. Also have fun high school can be some of the best 4 years of your life.

dont forgetin do computer science unless you actually like it. like 80% of the vaguely technical/mathematical/STEMboy people i know are doing CS and its going to be a giant bubble if it isnt already. tech companies are pushing for everyone to learn how to code so they can lower wages for programming jobs and establish some forgeted up technoserf class. the only way to escape the effects of this is to become a very competent programmer that specializes in something specific, and youre probably only going to get to that if you actually like computer science a lot. i think if youre a technical dude but you dont really care that much about CS in particular you should consider some form of engineering. mechanical engineers will probably always be in demand even if their starting salaries are a bit lower than programmers ATM.

dont be afraid of trying stuff. high school is basically a place for you to self-actualize and learn about who you are. check out a bunch of clubs and do stuff that seems out of your wheelhouse. look into community service/art/music. talk to people who you normally wouldn't talk to. my #1 regret in high school is that i mostly just let things pass by me because i was afraid to go out of my comfort zone.

also if youre the kind of kid who really cares about getting into a nice college, being able to write about how you grew in high school and having it actually be of substance really puts you ahead. college admissions officers have read thousands of applications and they can tell when you're being honest or when you're bullstuffting. if youre the kind of kid who's actually good at school, stuff like that (as well as extracurriculars) is the tiebreaker at the top level of college applicants. when everybody has a 4.0 GPA and like 10 AP credits and a 35 on the ACT, the other stuff (leadership of clubs, awards, community service, art or music, anything outside of school that would be cool for a teenager to be doing) is what sets you apart.

i have an ultimately optimistic view of high level college admissions - extremely good colleges are looking for kids who they think will grow into adults that represent their institution well. if you actually mold yourself into an interesting human - with principles, ideas, and achievements - they will take note and consider you to have very high potential

you should take APs if you can, they will literally save you thousands of dollars if the credits apply to the college you go to, because youll get to skip a bunch of the early starter classes that kids have to take. also just try to take classes that round you out, don't only take AP/honors science/math classes, do honors/AP english/humanities/art/social sciences as well

high school is the last time youre going to be locked in a building with a bunch of people your age for 7 hours a day. its surprisingly easy to make friends in an environment like that just because youre always in eachothers' presence basically. in college people spend less time in classes and more time at home/in the library/doing extracurricular stuff and youre not going to see the same people as often. make good friends and savor them

high school is also when youre going to (hopefully) have a lot of independence and simultaneously very few responsibilities. learn how to drive and forget around with your friends, before everyone has jobs or college eating up all their time

i went to one of the best high schools in the nation so my experience is severely biased by that, i didnt really have to deal with overworked teachers/students that didnt care and thats an environment that lots of people seem to face, so maybe all my advice doesnt really apply
« Last Edit: August 08, 2017, 02:36:02 PM by ultimamax »

  • do your homework
  • show up to class on time
  • dont get involved in cliques/interpersonal drama
  • be nice to everyone

if you do these 4 things, high school will be incredibly easy.
« Last Edit: August 08, 2017, 02:39:18 PM by Planr »

For the love of god do your class/home work because that stuff will just pile up the more you miss and it'll not be fun trying to bring up your grade because of all that missing/unfinished stuff
learned that in freshman year and it made me a better person for sophomore year

oh yeah and dont be no fricking silent loner man and try and join a club or some stuff and you will be alright, that or your money back guaranteed

once you become an 11th grade monday like me take robotics and chem so you can rule the world with robots and bombs

Lol good luck with an art degree. Minor in something useful at least
Why do almost all stem grads act nasty to other majors


Why do almost all stem grads act nasty to other majors
It's a way of resolving the cognitive dissonance caused by spending our best, most virile years of life preparing for a career that makes more money.

That being said, going into the arts/humanities is a good thing as long as you don't suck. The problem with those degrees is that they tend to attract people who were maybe 'A' English students back in high school, but have neither the talent nor the drive to actually make it as an author/journalist/whatever. The distinction between someone who 'can make it' and someone who can't is much less clear in the arts. There is also no filter to weed out the stuffty students going for an English degree.

On the other hand, it is nearly impossible to forget up with a STEM degree as long as you graduate from college. A degree in mechanical or electrical engineering means you can find a good-paying job somewhere, even if you're actually pretty dumb or unskilled. You might not be building rockets or pacemakers, but you can do some sort of pencil-pushing nonsense at a pipe-fabrication company for $80k a year.



On-topic:

I graduated from high school in 2016. My advice is to not do drugs, and if you are going to do drugs, at least finish your homework first. Lots of extremely promising kids from my high school totally lost all their momentum after they started getting into substances because they'd stay out late and not finish their work. It becomes way easier to justify lower standards after getting that first C or D, and it'll hurt you if you're trying to go to a good college. 

It's a way of resolving the cognitive dissonance caused by spending our best, most virile years of life preparing for a career that makes more money.

That being said, going into the arts/humanities is a good thing as long as you don't suck. The problem with those degrees is that they tend to attract people who were maybe 'A' English students back in high school, but have neither the talent nor the drive to actually make it as an author/journalist/whatever. The distinction between someone who 'can make it' and someone who can't is much less clear in the arts. There is also no filter to weed out the stuffty students going for an English degree.

On the other hand, it is nearly impossible to forget up with a STEM degree as long as you graduate from college. A degree in mechanical or electrical engineering means you can find a good-paying job somewhere, even if you're actually pretty dumb or unskilled. You might not be building rockets or pacemakers, but you can do some sort of pencil-pushing nonsense at a pipe-fabrication company for $80k a year.



On-topic:

I graduated from high school in 2016. My advice is to not do drugs, and if you are going to do drugs, at least finish your homework first. Lots of extremely promising kids from my high school totally lost all their momentum after they started getting into substances because they'd stay out late and not finish their work. It becomes way easier to justify lower standards after getting that first C or D, and it'll hurt you if you're trying to go to a good college. 

i seriously cant believe youre in my grade, i thought you were like in your 20s for how mature you are :p

On-topic:

I graduated from high school in 2016. My advice is to not do drugs, and if you are going to do drugs, at least finish your homework first. Lots of extremely promising kids from my high school totally lost all their momentum after they started getting into substances because they'd stay out late and not finish their work. It becomes way easier to justify lower standards after getting that first C or D, and it'll hurt you if you're trying to go to a good college. 
this is actually me except i started "doing games" when i got into college. recovery is hard and you should take the effort not to fall in the first place cause it takes far less effort to prevent failure than it is to fix it :(
« Last Edit: August 08, 2017, 04:48:35 PM by Conan »

It's a way of resolving the cognitive dissonance caused by spending our best, most virile years of life preparing for a career that makes more money.

That being said, going into the arts/humanities is a good thing as long as you don't suck. The problem with those degrees is that they tend to attract people who were maybe 'A' English students back in high school, but have neither the talent nor the drive to actually make it as an author/journalist/whatever. The distinction between someone who 'can make it' and someone who can't is much less clear in the arts. There is also no filter to weed out the stuffty students going for an English degree.

On the other hand, it is nearly impossible to forget up with a STEM degree as long as you graduate from college. A degree in mechanical or electrical engineering means you can find a good-paying job somewhere, even if you're actually pretty dumb or unskilled. You might not be building rockets or pacemakers, but you can do some sort of pencil-pushing nonsense at a pipe-fabrication company for $80k a year.

Appreciate the reply, i dont even have to go further into anything.
There is just so much flac floating around art degrees because of all the stereotypical pot heads and bums it gets me pretty heated when people bash a perfectly viable path. Especially when some rooster sucker from a general university thinks that theyre going to be working for google or nasa making 200k/yr with their 4 year degree and no external projects / internships that show the their worth. Then they go on about how theyre better than everyone when they havent even graduated.

  • do your homework
  • show up to class on time
  • dont get involved in cliques/interpersonal drama
  • be nice to everyone

if you do these 4 things, high school will be incredibly easy.
this

join a club tho, makes it more fun

note that instead of not doing homework, getting half done doesn't kill your grade as much
if for whatever reason you just really don't want to do all of it, as long as you're getting some credit you'll be fine