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1 posted on 11/22/2010 6:21:51 PM PST by RandysRight
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To: RandysRight

If she needs a GED, she can get it and then go to a community college. If she keeps her class load light enough, there won’t be a reason she can’t graduate with “A”s.

Life doesn’t end with high school. It’s what you do afterward that matters.


2 posted on 11/22/2010 6:27:30 PM PST by ConservativeMind ("Humane" = "Don't pen up pets or eat meat, but allow infanticide, abortion, and euthanasia.")
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To: RandysRight

Homeshool is the answer


3 posted on 11/22/2010 6:27:30 PM PST by driftdiver (I could eat it raw, but why do that when I have a fire.)
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To: RandysRight
“[So for] the rest of your life you’re going have to explain why you did not make it at a traditional high school.”

For the rest of your life, nobody is going to give a shit about high school.
4 posted on 11/22/2010 6:28:59 PM PST by Husker24
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To: RandysRight

I can’t figure out the context here. What is CCCC?


5 posted on 11/22/2010 6:30:21 PM PST by madprof98 ("moritur et ridet" - salvianus)
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To: RandysRight

Some people just can’t take the dumbed down, brainwashing, mind controlled atmosphere of public education. There’s just something in them that rejects it all.

The words of the school Principal are a perfect example of what your daughter rejected, consciously or unconsciously.

Your daughter should be very proud of herself for what she accomplished and still is accomplishing—at least as proud as you are of her. She is a high school graduate and nothing that dork says can take that away from her. It doesn’t matter how she got her degree, she’s got it. The innane mumblings of that jerk of a Principal notwithstanding.

And you, I wish I had had a dad like you. Good work, dad.

And you, daughter of Randy...... Congratulations!!!!


6 posted on 11/22/2010 6:33:48 PM PST by Auntie Mame (Fear not tomorrow. God is already there.)
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To: RandysRight

Missouri has laws like that, where you quit school and if you don’t re-enroll in a fixed time frame, you are a “drop-out”...if you re-enroll past the date, however and then graduate, you are a “graduate” AND a “drop-out”...crazy...magritte


7 posted on 11/22/2010 6:34:21 PM PST by magritte ("There are moments, Jeeves, when one asks oneself "Do trousers matter?")
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To: RandysRight
In his senior year, a friend of mine had a disagreement with a very hostile teacher. He quit high school and because he was already accepted in a college, started college in the fall of the same year. He received his bachelor degree, went on to receive his masters and retired as a teacher four years ago. He never received a high school diploma.

Today he owns his own successful business in the Adirondack mountains of New York State in addition to receiving his teacher's pension. : )

10 posted on 11/22/2010 6:41:16 PM PST by mia
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To: RandysRight

Traditional highschools my ARSE.Life starts after highschool.I hope the young lady does well.


12 posted on 11/22/2010 6:48:10 PM PST by HANG THE EXPENSE (Life is tough.It's tougher when you're stupid.)
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To: RandysRight

I never graduated from high school either. I consider it a badge of honor.


14 posted on 11/22/2010 7:07:58 PM PST by Hoodat ( Don't touch my junk, Bro !)
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To: RandysRight

One person I was in high school with dropped out after his Junior year. A very smart kid. The school principal pulled off him getting into Wabash College in the fall of what would have been his Sr. year in H.S. After graduating from Wabash, he went back to Boston and has had a successful construction business. He has a blue collar background when he grew up.


15 posted on 11/22/2010 7:22:33 PM PST by CORedneck
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To: RandysRight
One of the greatest disservices that the modern, so-called "public education" system has inflicted on young people is the label, "dropout."

Several years ago, at a 20-year class reunion for a former high school group of my students, a successful business man was introduced as having been invited by other students. As one, then another, of the attendees stood to say a few words, this man also spoke, after being introduced by another person who mentioned the business success and achievements of his friend.

The guest's words were thoughtful and emotional. First, he thanked the others for inviting him, adding that he appreciated it especially because he had been a "dropout," and had not felt worthy for some time of being included in the group, with doubts about whether or not to attend. He briefly told the story of some of the difficulties he had faced while in school and of his guilt about leaving school. He humbly spoke of his family, his community, and his appreciation for the kindness of his former classmates.

As a former teacher, my turn came next. Prepared remarks went by the wayside, for this was a "teaching moment," and it could not be missed. A few years earlier, I had participated in a state group purportedly seeking to "improve" public schools, which turned out to be a political move by a public official seeking political advantage. Remembering that, and the vast evidence available of the abject failure of these "public schools" to improve the learning performance of children, my remarks were addressed first to the man who had just poured out his heart about the burden he had carried at having been labeled by the very "system" which had failed him as a "dropout."

It was apparent that his life had been impacted by that label, and that no amount of success on his own part as a positive influence in his community, as a person who provided jobs to others, as one who gave money to charity and to churches, and as an all-around good citizen--none of these had erased the stigma placed upon him by so-called "educators."

My first remarks were directed to him, telling him that he should never allow that term to define him again, that he may have been one of the wise students who recognized that he was not being served well and made a choice to seek employment, work hard, achieve, and better himself despite the lack of a high school diploma. He was advised to treasure the fact that his fellow students remembered him and wanted him to be a part of the reunion and that no label applied by institutional bureaucrats can define the potential of any human being.

The attendees' applause and support of those remarks spoke volumes, as others agreed with the premise.

Failing in their duties to appropriately challenge students and to improve their learning performance, public education bureaucrats, such as the Principal named here, attempt to deflect their own failure on to the victims--the under served students and families who pay their salaries and future pensions.

With so many students who graduate from high school, only to find that they must take remedial reading or math courses when they get to college, how can these so-called educators label anyone in a negative context who simply chooses to find another path to success? Home schooling, as one retired Professor of Education at a major university has stated, is the "brightest spot" in American education today.

17 posted on 11/22/2010 8:44:29 PM PST by loveliberty2
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To: RandysRight

Not a drop-out

A refusenik (otkaznik)

Go your own way, do not worry what others will think, and so you will make your own life and not what other think that life should be.


24 posted on 11/22/2010 10:13:00 PM PST by ASOC (What are you doing now that Mexico has become OUR Chechnya?)
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To: RandysRight
When you and your family get down the road from this experience, you are going to look back and realize you all were jumping through the hoops of crazy people who abused the heck out of your family!

Just be glad she is out and try to shake the Stockholm syndrome you guys have lived with for the last few years being the captive of petty bureaucrats! Public school drones think they are way more important and powerful than they really are in the scheme of things.

26 posted on 11/23/2010 1:40:23 PM PST by SaraJohnson
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