“The only way that we can live is if we grow. The only way we can grow is if we change. The only way we can change is if we learn. The only way we can learn is if we are exposed. And the only way that we are exposed is if we throw ourselves into the open.”
Probably RE which some people might find strange because I'm an atheist but the RE teacher I had in secondary school was an absolute legend and also wasn't religious herself which meant she wasn't for or against any particular religious group plus thinking and opinions were allowed too which was rare at my school.
History, I absolutely adored it right up until I started doing joint honours English and history at uni, at which point I dropped it as I just fell out of love with it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Auror.
English was and always will bore me to death. I love reading but can't stand to sit and analyse something or write a paper.
Ironically, I hated English at school, but as soon as I started it at A-level I came to adore it, to the point I am plotting a PHD in English.
Now if you'd have told me that I would be doing English to this level I would never have believed you!
A level PE, because it was so fascinating, it is about 80% theory, we did physiology, psychology and the history off sport, plus then our two practical sports
I liked history, but my first history lesson in year 8 was my favourite because the first task was to name the six wives of Henry VIII from pictures the teacher showed us and I was the only one to get six out of six!
"Never be a spectator of unfairness or studpidity. The grave will supply plenty of time for silence." Christopher Hitchens
'When words fail, music speaks'
I am transsexual and homoromantic and proud to be.
Maths. Because numbers and logic are wonderful. I actually won an award in college for 'most dedicated mathematician' because I spent most of my time doing it, instead of my other subjects.
French was my favourite in the last 2 years of High school because i had a mahoosive crush on my teacher.
The only time you will find real light is when you're searching in the dark..
Probably RE, although modern studies (basically politics) was good too because there was a lot of discussion and debates in them. Not a subject in itself, but I really enjoyed physical chemistry (the theoretical stuff), but couldn't be bothered with organic chemistry or any of the practicals.
I did Geography at university, but it bore no resemblance to school-level Geography.
Mine was Child Development. We did next to nothing in that class, i was sat with my friends and it was literally just like not being in a lesson at all.
Also, English, i was good at that. And i wanted to do well.
x
<3
If a tree falls in a forest and no one’s around to hear it,
it does make a sound but then that sound is gone.
I’m not saying you will find the meaning of life in other people,
Im saying other people are the life to which you provide the meaning.
It changed a couple of times for me. I spent a year in the US as an exchange student and after that I LOVED English the most. I just had fun analyzing and interpreting short stories and novels and reading and just learning about the English language. argh <3
but since way back in 5th grade I LOVED history. It's just so interesting to me. I ccouldn't even name a single thing we talked about that bored me. The fact that they touch you about things that actually happened and the motiviation behind it. I remember the French Revolution and American Revolution so vividly. Since I grew up in Germany learning about WW1 and WW2 can be pretty exhausting so those weren't my favorite history classes especially they drag 1990 - 1945 German history over 2 years of school (!!!!!!!) it got kinda boring. I sitll think WW1 was way more ineresting. but history was definitely one of those classes I didn't want to end