Top 1200 Catholic School Quotes & Sayings - Page 18

Explore popular Catholic School quotes.
Last updated on November 18, 2024.
I am a full-time mom; that is my first job. The most important job ever. I started my business when he started school. When he is in school, I do my meetings, my sketches, and everything else. I cook him breakfast. Bring him to school. Pick him up. Prepare his lunch. I spend the afternoon with him.
I was a competitive swimmer in middle school and high school.
Fortune is the best school of courage when she is fraught with anger, in the same way as winds and tempests are the school of the sailorboy. — © Pietro Metastasio
Fortune is the best school of courage when she is fraught with anger, in the same way as winds and tempests are the school of the sailorboy.
My first girlfriend in high school, I had a girlfriend in grade school, but my first girlfriend in high school was Mare Winningham, very fine actress.
I was doing good in school, but I didn't want to do school anymore.
I first began with the recorder in our community music school. After that, I played horn and participated in the school orchestra.
My high school wasn't a big public school; it was tiny. There were 36 girls in my graduating class. We were a big group of girls that by the time senior year came along couldn't wait to get away from school fast enough but we loved each other. It's really fun to see the girls at reunions now.
I hated school. Even to this day, when I see a school bus it's just depressing to me. The poor little kids.
I had a great education. From kindergarten to John Dewey High School in Coney Island, I am public-school educated.
Without federal standards for school lunches, candy bars, packaged snacks and soda can be offered to our children in school.
Pretty much everyone hates high school. It's a measure of your humanity, I suspect. If you enjoyed high school, you were probably a psychopath or a cheerleader. Or possibly both. Those things aren't mutually exclusive, you know. I've tried to block out the memory of my high school years, but no matter how hard you try, it's always with you, like an unwanted hitchhiker. Or herpes. I assume.
I loved school, maybe too much, really. I was summa cum laude in high school. I was driven that way.
I always wrote songs. Elementary school, middle school. It didn't feel more creative than speaking. It was just normal to do that.
Get out of bed, go to school, stick at school. Make it happen for yourself because those opportunities are waiting. — © Andrew Forrest
Get out of bed, go to school, stick at school. Make it happen for yourself because those opportunities are waiting.
When I was in grade school and high school, I did a lot of chorale singing. And the chorus would be tenor, bass, and alto and soprano.
I was never really bullied at school. I was pretty confident in terms of school work and teachers and I've never shyed away from much but a lot of people have come up to me and said that they were bullied at school and my portrayal of Neville has influenced them a lot in their lives and helped them out.
Well, when I moved to L.A. at 17, I had just come out of high school. I grew up and went to public school in Boston.
Mayo College, where I got my grounding, is a private boarding school. It is a traditional school with brilliant teachers including some from overseas.
I didn't go to acting school, but I've been observing my fellow man for 66 years now, and I would think that's the best school there is.
I had an all right high school, even though I hated school. I wasn't massively popular, but I was okay. But I wouldn't want to do it again.
I stayed a year in the sixth form and there was talk of Cambridge, but I wanted to go to drama school. At 17 and three months I went to the Old Vic School in London. This most remarkable and brilliant drama school lasted only six years because the Old Vic Theatre hadn't the money to go on funding it.
I was 17, still in school, and my manager saw me in school, and then we hooked up, and after that, I went straight into making music.
I graduated high school a year early and moved to Los Angeles to go to acting school, which is hilarious.
I was playing sports all the time, and my parents, Anne and John, encouraged me to play in grade school and high school.
Even when I was in school shows, in elementary school doing plays, I'd always go off book and start improvising.
You don't have to follow what most players do by going to the top school. You can do anything at any school you're at, as long as you're focused and you work hard.
I got kicked out of high school, went to 3 different high schools and summer school and extra night school just so I could maybe graduate and try to make it up, because I flunked pretty much my entire freshman year, mainly because I just never showed up.
We are all carriers of our own stories. We have never trusted our own voices. Reforms came, but we don't make them. They were presented by people removed from schools, by 'experts'. Such changes bi passes school. School by school changes, however slow, could make a powerful difference.
Think, for a moment, about our educational ladder. We've strengthened the steps lifting students from elementary school to junior high, and those from junior high to high school. But, that critical step taking students from high school into adulthood is badly broken. And it can no longer support the weight it must bear.
I left school with basically nothing, I was a special needs kid. I did feel as though my school had let me down.
I did some school plays in elementary school, but that was it.
We are not a club or a Sunday school class, but a school of the woods.
At school, I was basically a loner, it was hard until I was 15 or so. Then I went to art school and was gifted with freedom to do the things I really wanted to do.
School's not for everyone, but I'm not telling people to leave school.
I wasn't hugely popular at school. In fact, I was bullied at school.
I was pursuing the arts with theater in school, and I was doing after-school activities, but not in any real movement towards a professional career.
Hannah Storm in a horrifying, horrifying outfit today. She's got on red go-go boots and a catholic school plaid skirt ... way too short for somebody in her 40s or maybe early 50s by now...She's got on her typically very, very tight shirt. She looks like she has sausage casing wrapping around her upper body ... I know she's very good, and I'm not supposed to be critical of ESPN people, so I won't ... but Hannah Storm ... come on now! Stop! What are you doing? ... She's what I would call a Holden Caulfield fantasy at this point.
I went to art school for about a year. I was born and raised in the Willamette Valley in Oregon into a middle-class family who didn't have the funds to say, "Here, kid. Here's your money for school." So I worked real hard during the summer and saved money and was able to go to school for a year and borrowed a little money which I paid back after that first year.
I'm from a working-class background - I had free school meals all my life and then spent six years in art school. — © Cornelia Parker
I'm from a working-class background - I had free school meals all my life and then spent six years in art school.
Like all school students, I think I did a play in my school. The common things, I would say. Nothing really exceptional.
High school is very intense for everyone. But at a boarding school, because you're there 24 hours a day, everything gets magnified.
I listened to a lot of No Doubt stuff when I was in high school - or maybe it was middle school... I don't want to age myself too much!
You basically have to be willing to devote your life to journalism if you want to break in. Treat it like it's medical school or law school.
I was always an actor, starting in middle school. I was in all the plays and all that. But dancing didn't come into my life until late into high school.
In point of substantial merit the law school belongs in the modern university no more than a school of fencing or dancing.
The best school in the world will scarcely save a boy who hates the school and the purpose it serves and the society that created it.
What makes me sad about school is that the people who are unhappy are unhappy because they don't believe it will change. And I just want to say: 'It does! High school ends and it's over.' I will tell anyone that it's OK to be unhappy at school, make lots of mistakes and then it will be over.
The fact is, I was never too bright in school. I ain't ashamed of it, though. I mean, how much do school principals make a month?
My mom put me into a performing arts elementary school back in Cincinnati, so I started studying acting in school when I was seven. — © KiKi Layne
My mom put me into a performing arts elementary school back in Cincinnati, so I started studying acting in school when I was seven.
I thought that being popular in school was just so pathetic. I knew I had a future over and beyond the horizon of that school.
We all remember special days at school, whether it was going on a field trip, doing a science experiment, or performing in a school play.
I thought about going to NYU film school - that was this ideal to me. But I didn't make any kind of grades in high school.
I mean I met James Wan at film school. That's where we met. I didn't go to film school to find someone else to work with. I was thinking I would go and learn to direct and go and be a director like everyone else at school.
I can't imagine going to an all-girls school. I went to a public school.
I do school online. My favorite thing to do with school is to finish things and then watch it go away, especially when I am working on a laptop.
I remember running at school sports day, and I would win everything, but I wasn't a super athlete or a superstar at high school.
At age 11 in 1960, I moved to an academic state secondary school, Harrow County Grammar School for Boys.
I promised to finish school, so I'll figure it out I guess. Besides, I'm on a special school for musicians and artists, so I'm not the only one with this life style.
I attended the elementary school at Schweinfurt and the secondary school.
I never even went to high school because I went straight from middle school into the music business. I don't really know what it is supposed to be like.
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