better then me...i think by the end of my senior year i had like a 1.7...i really didnt care but i graduated, and thats all that matters
I know a handful of people around my town that are business owners and are green/democrat and are in one of those "Small business" organizations. A neighbor of mine just got a job at this firm owned by one of the people in the organization (he actually started working for the company under the table... The owner is an older southern democrat type)...Anyway, he's a surveyor now. He ended up taking his GED/SATs at 16. My grandma left school at 17, when she had my dad. She ended up just traveling around sewing for ten years, had three kids, while working on a masters degree in Psychology/Anthropology. She ended up starting a lot of nursing programs here (She also took the mcat at Duke, when she lived in NC). She also accidently found that people were running coke through this mental hospital she was working at... odd. I remember her telling me stories about traveling around to different festivals and smoking people up at work.
when i was 17, my counselor told me that i should drop out and get my ged because high school was getting me down so bad that i couldn't study. she said that i would do fine on my ged and most colleges would accept it. and it was true, so i still have that option. i also have a friend who did that at 15 or 16 and he's considered a genius. there's really nothing wrong with it. i thought absoultly nothing of my "high school experience". if you feel the same way, it's a great idea. there's nothing stopping you from continuing your education.
Depends on the subject that you take If we're talking percentage then generally 50-60% overall will get you a C which is a pass Yeah, its easy And yet staggeringly 10 people in my year (and I went to one of the top state non selective schools in the country) managed to not get 5 GCSES (which you need to be employed cleaning toilets in MacDonalds)