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I am in 11th grade and my high school changed my program card completely and gave me new teachers for all my classes. I was very very very comfortable with my old teachers because the way they used to teach, nothing in the world could make a human understand anything like they made me understand. However the new teachers are the exact opposite. So I went to my school programmer and he told me he will not do it. My guidance said she will not do it. I went to six other people who don't even bother to hear my story. I was telling them that I want my old schedule back because i am actually a student who goes to school to learn and not just let the teacher pass me without me doing any work. There are other kids in the class that I want to remain in who goof around they whole period, they got to stay and not me. Tomorrow I will give it a last try and if they don't do it I will drop out of school. Can I get a lawyer before that to sue the school for not providing me the classes I wanted?

2007-09-19 11:20:06 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Entertainment & Music Polls & Surveys

5 answers

get their attention another way if this isnt working , write a letter to the editor or an article for your local paper and have it splattered all over how they are treating you and your desire to learn. (let them know about 12 hours before you actually turn in the article and see if they don't change their minds,) and as long as it is all truth you can name their names in the article.
and also talk to your parents about this and the article .
best wishes :)

2007-09-19 12:08:55 · answer #1 · answered by Penny Mae 7 · 0 0

Sorry buddy but I really don't think so. I understand your fustration but one thing about learning is also learning how to be flexible. Once you hit college you'll be able to pick your own professors but sometimes a certain class you need won't have a variety of professors to choose from and you just have deal and and adapt to the way they teach. Good luck with that. And seriously, stop with the sueing...you're only, what 16 and you want to sue already? I sort of think that's a little extreme.

2007-09-19 18:31:14 · answer #2 · answered by basmusiq 5 · 0 0

Talk to your parents about this and see what they say before dropping out of school

2007-09-19 18:28:22 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

a high school is not under any legal obligation to provide you with the classes you wanted.

2007-09-19 18:29:01 · answer #4 · answered by The French Connection 6 · 1 0

i think you have the right, if you are that serious about your education then they definitely have to change it it is not like you are demanding a million dollars for them all you are saying is that u want your program change and i damn agree with you 100%

2007-09-19 18:38:42 · answer #5 · answered by Oli-NYC 6 · 0 1

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