Top 1200 Grad School Quotes & Sayings - Page 16

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Last updated on December 21, 2024.
I didn't read much in high school, maybe because I didn't go to high school. Instead, I worked.
I think it's unreasonable to expect kids at 17 to know what they want to do with the rest of their lives. And actually, I guess I had a desire to be an artist, and I did enroll in art school out of high school.
I was in school studying International Studies and Sociology. I was really into what was going on in school. I was affected by the ideas and engaged as a student, but not disciplined or motivated enough to do the work. That was a fear of mine for a while, that nothing was motivating.
I really wasn't heavy in high school. But no one feels right in their own skin, particularly in high school. — © Tina Fey
I really wasn't heavy in high school. But no one feels right in their own skin, particularly in high school.
My dad worked for a theatre company that was two minutes away from my primary school, so I'd just walk there after school and watch the rehearsals. I think that's probably when I fell in love with acting and telling stories.
My dad dropped out of school in middle school, but he reads five or six books a week, and my mom reads about two.
I thought that if acting didn't work out, I'd have done law school or medical school: probably law to be honest.
We had a motto in my school: 'Men for Others.' And it was there that my faith became something vital. My north star for orienting my life. And when I left high school, I knew that I wanted to battle for social justice.
My personal advice is to go to school first and get a liberal arts education, and then if you want to pursue acting, go to graduate school.
I didn't do school plays... I've never done a play in my life, actually. Not even a nativity. If I'd been in a school play, I'd probably have sneezed and messed everything up.
In my freshman year in high school, I went to the only public high school in Boston with a theatre program.
Every day after school for 10 years, I was on the set of 'Married... with Children,' which is a really funny and perverse place for a little girl in a Catholic school uniform to grow up.
I went to an all-white school in high school.
I was at the Royal Art School. That was a preparatory school specially for art teachers. You see, it was not so much for the development of artists. But we had there terribly stiff training.
One goes through school, college, medical school and one's internship learning little or nothing about goodness but a good deal about success. — © Ashley Montagu
One goes through school, college, medical school and one's internship learning little or nothing about goodness but a good deal about success.
I'm a filmmaker who decided to go to culinary school. All I picked up was the fact if I didn't understand what was going on with every single ingredient, I could be qualifying for, like, the lunch food job at my daughter's school.
Howard Zinn ran what is called the Zinn Education Project. It is a radical, radical bunch of insane lunatic leftists. And there is a project at the Zinn Educational Project: A People's History of Muslims in the United States - What School Textbooks and the Media Miss. And this program is teaching your high school student, juror junior high or middle school student.
Most of the girls I know are from my school. I've gone to school with the same people since fourth grade, so I can't wait to go to a place where I don't know anybody.
In high school, my principal was a priest and my assistant basketball coach. We were close. In high school, I would talk to him a little bit.
My nan and grandad were really important. They took me to school every day. I couldn't have gone to theatre school without them because my parents had to work - there wasn't much money.
I come from a school of artists, the Mission School in San Francisco, and there are a lot of artists I look up to.
There is a school in Heaven, and there one has only to learn how to love. The school is in the Cenacle; the Teacher is Jesus; the matter taught is His Flesh and His Blood
There was quite a lot of lying around in fields at Stonar, a small independent girls' school in the country near Bath. It was a non-selective school and the right environment for me: academically not particularly pushy.
I went to public school, elementary through high school. I went to homecoming, to football games, pep rallies, I got detention, I got an F. I've done it all.
I've biked my whole life. We didn't have bus service when I was going to school in Holland, so I biked around 25 kilometers to school every day.
I been drunk most my life, don't ask me why. Through ninth grade, I ain't go to high school, ...I went to school high.
My sister is an artist and an interior designer. She went to high school for art. I went to high school for music.
I went to a failing school, and by the grace of God, my mother was able to put me into private school, and had she not, I would probably be in a gang or dead right now, because that was the road I was going down.
You got to miss class to do it. Like, many periods of school. And then they took us to an elementary or middle school, and we told kids that they could be cool when they grew up even if they didn't do drugs.
The roll out of a new car is always filled with great anticipation; it's almost like going back to school for a new school year.
Anyone driving through London after the school term ends will notice immediately how much easier it is to get around. The school run contributes massively to congestion.
I hope I give girls an opportunity to realize that they can swim and go to school at the same time. It's not to be given up once they get out of high school. They can continue doing it for the rest of their lives.
An educator's most important task, one might say his holy duty, is to see to it that no child is discouraged at school, and that a child who enters school already discouraged regains his self-confidence through his school and his teacher. This goes hand in hand with the vocation of the educator, for education is possible only with children who look hopefully and joyfully upon the future.
I went to an art school in high school and got in a little trouble like you do when you're a teenager and not being closely supervised. I did. I followed the Dead around, and it was fun. It was great. It was kind and sweet and lovely.
Occasionally, I would focus on a particular school project and become obsessed with, what seemed to my mother, to be trivial details instead of apportioning the time I spent on school work in a more efficient way.
I remember looking at books when I was in high school, but I don't think I really stood in front of a genuine painting or sculpture until I was out of high school.
I sang in church choir all my life, through elementary school, junior high and high school.
I didn't go to high school, and I didn't go to grade school either. Education, I think, is for refinement and is probably a liability.
I grew up a little north of New York City and went to high school at Regis, an all-boys tuition-free high school in Manhattan. — © Phil Klay
I grew up a little north of New York City and went to high school at Regis, an all-boys tuition-free high school in Manhattan.
My next step must be to go to drama school. Well, I get into drama school, so I did that.
When I was starting out, I followed along the path that seemed to be marked out for me - from high school to college to law school to professional life.
Grandfather always said school’s a place where they take sixteen years to wear down your brain. Grandfather hardly went to school either.
I only went a year to high school. I should have been in high school, but I was in a band, and when you're successful doing that - well, you aren't too likely to go back.
I went to school at Colorado State. I finished my degree in pre-medicine and nutrition with aspirations of actually going to graduate school in medicine, which I didn't.
At school people found it quite funny that I did ballroom, but I recently went to my school reunion and all they wanted to talk about was ballroom and 'Strictly.'
I miss my friends in public school, but it's kind of a part of something that you have to give up. I'd rather perform than go to public school.
My parents, and especially my mother, encouraged by the director of the local school which I was attending, wanted in spite of everything to send me to a National School of Arts and Crafts so that I could later become an engineer.
I thought my high school would either be like 'Beverly Hills 90210' or 'Stand and Deliver' - it was just a run-of-the-mill high school.
School just speeds things up... Without school it might take 70 years before you wake up and are able to count.
I was about 10, and I was supposed to be playing the piano at the school concert, and I got up in front of the whole school and said, 'I'm sorry. I'm changing the agenda. I want to play some songs I've written.'
It just felt like the right thing to do to give back to a state school and public school. I'm a really big fan of public education. — © Brendan Iribe
It just felt like the right thing to do to give back to a state school and public school. I'm a really big fan of public education.
I went to beauty school, not art school.
The characters are that vague TV high school age, but they'll be in high school as long as we need them to be.
Encouragement from my high school teacher Patty Hart said 'you need to focus and theater might be your route out of here.' I created the program, went to college and graduate school and now here I am.
My parents were so proud when I got a scholarship to go to theatre school - it was unheard of that a coal-miner's son should go to drama school.
I studied voice when I was at school, and I was in the chamber choir, and I studied music theory as well, so I guess a lot of it came from being taught at school.
So many people have said to me that when you become a school parent, it is like going back to school yourself. Some of those insecurities come out and are projected through your child.
My parents were so proud when I got a scholarship to go to theatre school - it was unheard of that a coal-miners son should go to drama school.
When I started making beats in the 7th grade - even through middle school and high school - I admired a lot of Shawty Redd, stuff like that, that real dark, trap sound.
When I got into junior high school, that's when my mom let me dress how I wanted to dress. Up to that point I wore suits to school all the time.
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