Monday 16 March 2015

AARON TRIDDER (high school story)

MY GRADE 12 STORY AT (MASEALAMA SECONDARY SCHOOL) I am grade 12 student who has just recently graduated. You might call me accomplished, and in a way, I am, but not in the way you’d think. 12 years of pouring over text books and being lined up to be judged in front of my peers has not made me any more intelligent. I can tell you the first 45 digits of Pi and I can explain to you the difference between an acid and a base, I can recite the Pythagorean Theorem in my sleep, I will recite lines out of a textbook like they are a religion. But I cannot tell you the value of security, or of kindness. The distinct contrast between personal health and personal gain. I can tell you in grade 10 four of my classmates attempted to take their own lives before finals. I can tell you our counsellors office is always booked. I can tell you how when I didn’t understand something in AP Chemistry my teacher asked me to leave if I could not participate in his class. I merely asked him to explain a question. Instead of doing his job and teaching, he told me to leave. Told me I was not good enough to be there. Mistakes are viewed as failure in these hallways. A wrong answer is a sin you must atone to, not a human error, but a flaw so grand it defines your entire life course. There is no “average” here. We all must exceed expectations. Do your parents know that a grade that is considered average is a “C”? When I got a C in fourth grade my parents grounded me for a month. They said I was lazy and stupid and incompetent and that I’d better smarten up and stop fooling around. I never fooled around. I am driven by a deep need to impress others. I never fool around. I worked and worked and worked, with a deep hollow of anxiety in my chest. I have never been good at History, but I worked and worked and I attained at best a low B. It was not good enough. It is not said but we are expected to put our education before our personal health. It is not asked of us, but it is what we must do to achieve what we are asked to achieve. Our teachers will tell you, “Oh, I only give them one hour of homework each night.” Which is essentially true, each of my five teachers only gives me one to two hours of homework each night. Hmm, that adds up to 5-10 hours of homework, and overdue classwork, and projects. Say goodbye to sleep, say goodbye to feeling calm. I’ve developed a deep rooted anxiety disorder due to school and perfectionistic tendencies. Even when you get 100 percent on an assignment they still criticise you, it is never good enough. One slip, and you are in deep deep trouble. I can tell you that 90 percent of us try our hardest, and our teachers and parents stand in the sidelines, screaming, “You can do better than that!”" — Why I say our education system is flawed (because south african policy is killing us) they have to be more academic schools,also technicon school, because we will never be the same, we all intelligent but we're not intelligent the same, some of us can fix cellphones,others can fix cars or electronics....that's good example..you're not a failure until God says you are!! All teenagers are important because in five years to come, they will be the one who role us...and south africa need good leaders... Visit my blogs.. (Aarontridder.blog.com) or (http://aarontridder.wordpress.com) THANK YOU From: Aaron mothotoana ŦŔĪDDƐŔ™

1 comment:

Aaron mothotoana said...

Hmmmmmmm. I hope this article will help some of teenagers.....

AARON TRIDDER: I LOVE MY HOME.

AARON MOTHOTOANA FEATURED Community – I love my home: It’s the best! I grew up in a small village called MOshate GA-mamabolo in Limpopo....