Though it changes a little depending on the grade you're in, school as I knew it was basically this: You get up early in the morning, have breakfast, get dressed, anything you needed to do. Catching a bus or riding with your parents, maybe even walking if you were close enough, you arrive at school and start going through your classes. Elementary students generally stayed in the same room with the same teacher all day, but middle and high school students have a varied curriculum and several teachers. The sorts of subjects you learn vary from English to History to Science, and then there's side classes like Chorus, Gym, and Band.
Around midday you would go to lunch down in the cafeteria, where you could either buy a lunch from the school or eat one you brought from home. Then there would be more classes, though some students may also have a free period at this point, depending on what your schedule was. In class you're assigned homework and projects to do at home, which reinforce everything you learn while in the classes themselves.
There's sports and other activities as well, like marching band and ROTC. As for college, well... [A slight shrug.] That's a whole 'nother story.
[Video]
Though it changes a little depending on the grade you're in, school as I knew it was basically this: You get up early in the morning, have breakfast, get dressed, anything you needed to do. Catching a bus or riding with your parents, maybe even walking if you were close enough, you arrive at school and start going through your classes. Elementary students generally stayed in the same room with the same teacher all day, but middle and high school students have a varied curriculum and several teachers. The sorts of subjects you learn vary from English to History to Science, and then there's side classes like Chorus, Gym, and Band.
Around midday you would go to lunch down in the cafeteria, where you could either buy a lunch from the school or eat one you brought from home. Then there would be more classes, though some students may also have a free period at this point, depending on what your schedule was. In class you're assigned homework and projects to do at home, which reinforce everything you learn while in the classes themselves.
There's sports and other activities as well, like marching band and ROTC. As for college, well... [A slight shrug.] That's a whole 'nother story.
But does that answer any questions?