Sunday 17 June 2012

Is your teacher mean, or just simply too worried about you?

  Good day. In this post, I will tell you how to find out if your teacher is mean, or just too worried about you. If she is just too worried, just study harder and get A*s or just As, and she might stop being too mean.
 
  Is your teacher mean?
    Well... This is a tough subject. If your teacher is this kind of person, you might as well just study hard and hope to get into a class that she doesn't teach next year. Okay, so... answer these questions, and look for what the answers to the questions mean at the end. :) Good luck!

1. How much homework does your teacher give?
    (a) only about 3 or 4 pieces.
    (b) 4 or 5.
    (c) 6 or more.

2. Does your teacher ever laugh?
    (a) yes.
    (b) no.

3. Does your teacher like to talk to her students?
    (a) yes!
    (b) uhh.... No. :(
    (c) not much.

4. Do you enjoy her lessons?
    (a) Um... Sometimes.
    (b) Never! She screams all of the time at students who are innocent!
    (c) No. She takes everything too seriously and never jokes.

5. How does she react when you get good grades?
    (a) She gets relieved.
    (b) She gruffly tells us that we can do better next time, but she smiles secretly.
    (c) She screams at us because we didn't get full marks.

Hmm... This one is really hard to guarantee. Here's the good news : if you get this combination, or something really close to it, your teacher just needs to get good grades and look at happy students who do well and have fun before she can become all - out nice. Here the combination is:
    1. c 2. a 3. c / a 4. c / a 5. a / b

There! And... well, the sign that your teacher is really just plain mean is this combo, and combinations close to it :
    1. b 2. b 3. b 4. b 5. c
Huh. Mostly Bs... I didn't know! :) I didn't plan it this way either. So... I hope you enjoyed this post, and I also sincerely hope that your maybe - mean - maybe - nice teacher becomes a student - loving one!

    Sincerely,
 Kirsten Clare

Monday 1 August 2011

Reasons to be grateful for your education: Girls

  Now, this article is about why Girls should be grateful for being able to study in an appropriate school. In the olden days, some girls went to very poor schools, or some none at all. The girls all wanted to be able to receive an education, which was not thought necessary in the years around the 1960s. Girls were though to belong in the house, taking care of the chores and all the rest while the men went to school. Boys needed to go to school more than girls did as they had to find good jobs to support the family. Therefore, going to school wasn't as treasured to boys as to girls. Those girls who had managed to receive an education treasured it greatly and the fear of not being able to study anymore was great. The girls who were fortunate enough to be receive an education needed to get good grades in order to be allowed to continue studying. Otherwise, if they had poor results, the mother would think that it was a waste of money to send her girl to school and stop it immediately while the boys were not threatened to stop. Even if they scored a zero, it is most likely that they would still be allowed to continue with their education.
  Nowadays, children wish that there was no school, the feeling in which I believe they must change. School is treasured and your parents send you to school for your own sake, not to torture you. Some girls in the olden days didn't know how to read or write!
  So girls of the world, I hope you hear me say, "Please treasure your studies like girls in the 1960s would have! :)"

  Sincerely,
Kirsten Clare

All about School 4ever

  Hello and I am Kirsten Clare, the manager of this website, known as School 4ever. This website is not a school website, but it suggests some ways of "having the school spirit" to children and introduces my busy timetable every week. My goal in creating this website is to encourage excitement in learning. Bringing out my best friend's love for learning when I was Primary 1 was tough, so now I want everybody to be grateful for their chance to even be able to study in a school. Please wish me good luck as I hope that this website will be a success.

  Sincerely,
Kirsten Clare