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Which Schools Would You Consider

What would you consider a high GPA in high school?

The answer to this depends in part on what type of scoring or ranking system your particular high school uses. Most schools use a 4.0 grading scale, with a 4.0 being the top or perfect score or rank. But there are some high schools, and a number of colleges and universities, which actually use a 6.0 scale. I grew up near one such university in the Midwest, so I know they exist. For a school that uses a 4 point scale, obviously anything above 3.5 is a high score. For schools which use a 6 point scale, this changes to 5.5 and above.

Which of these schools would you consider for an online Ph.D. program in Information Technology?

-Capella University - http://www.capella.edu/
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in Organization and Management
Information Technology Management Specialization

-Walden University - http://www.waldenu.edu/
Ph.D. in Applied Management and Decision Sciences
Information Systems Management Specialization

-Northcentral University - http://www.ncu.edu/
Doctor of Philosophy in Business Administration (Ph.D)
Computer and Information Security option or
Applied Computer Science option

-Nova Southeastern University - http://www.nova.edu/
Ph.D. in Computer Information Systems


I am open to suggestions too!

The criteria is as such:
1. The school must be regionally accredited (i.e. no DETC)
2. The school must be mostly online with a minimum of travel.

Would you consider school a public place?

Yes and no.

It's public in the sense that many people come to the same place at the same time and there is a limited expectation of privacy within the place. Those who have access to the school are generally free to move about within the premises with little restriction.

But it's not a public place in the sense that not just anyone is free to visit when they like. "In theory", access to schools is limited to just students, teachers, and other employees. Anyone outside of these groups must generally receive permission to visit and their movements within the premises tend to be somewhat limited.

In school what would you consider a grade of C as?

C is the grade around which there is no agreement - in that teachers tell parents - "C is satisfactory" and a C is not satisfactory to parents - ever. Parents are absolutely unhappy with Ds and Fs - but a teacher giving a C and telling parents - "This is a satisfactory grade" will never convince a parent of that. One of my schools even wrote it right on the report card - C - satisfactory. Your child is making satisfactory progress.It's rather like a waiter trying to convince a patron that their dinner is acceptable after the patron has deemed it not so. "O no, sir, our restaurant considers the taste of that to be satisfactory." Teachers will then expound on what the child does well - to reassure the parents that there is satisfactory progress being made to which parents respond, "Well, then, raise it to a B."A splay of grades could be helpful - did every student in the room receive a C? That tells you something but the reality is - grading is a murky process. Some teachers don't give As - some give very few - and while that doesn't make parents happy - unless their child is getting an A - it tells you that this class has its own grading scale. On the other hand, did the teacher announce - All of you begin this class with an A. Only if you make remarkable errors will I give Bs and Cs - and I don't give grades lower than Cs."'Mastery' is too little used as a concept or grading standard in schools. Is the student demonstrating mastery of the fundamental skills and/or concepts being taught? If not, why not - what can be done? That's the point but that point too often gets lost or overlooked. Does the student have weaknesses in skills? Does the C have portent for the future? Or is it an exception? Did some paper or project not get done - that happens. If though a student demonstrates reasonable skill at reading and reading comprehension, reasonable spelling, and reasonable writing - that student should be able to be reasonably successful in school - and pull Bs - provided the student does the homework, neatly, and hands it in on time. If a student has skill weaknesses - that's a different matter. A random or occasional C should not merit particular worry or attention - a string of them should.

Which high school class would you consider easier?

take normal. english, it doesnt matter what your friends do.. i did that, and i did not like it. and if honors is too stressful, more reason to take normal. as long as you dont interact with others, they wont mess with you.

if you are better at math, physics
memorize and stuff, then chemistry

hw part and marking comes second, because if you are better at one, then hw wont matter as much


if you are better at readint a textbook and answering questiins and going online, and researching, then self teaching is easier. but you might not know the right answers for tests, and youll have a hard grader. but if you study enough in class, then not a lot of homework

on the other hand, physics will be like having a lot of math homework, becayse you have a lot. it depends on how much you have in other classes too. but if you rnt good at self taught you might end up with a lot of hw anyways

so choose whatever suits you

i dont like chemistry at all, but i like self study. i am ok to great at math, and hw doesnt bother me, so i would choose physics, because i dont like chem. if i liked it or tolerated it, i would choose that, because it would be easier. but boring stuff makes it harder to learn.


hope tht helps

Would you consider free balling at school? ?

Free balling is OK for allowing nature to do it's best job of filling out ur new penis growth during spontaneous erections that happen for that purpose.

Beating off in class isn't Cool Man! It gets in the way of ur focus for why ur in school in the first place. Since U need to B there, might as well fill that purpose. Besides, someone noticing U might label U as a perv. which isn't true of coarse, but would be an a nasty titles to get nailed with through the rest of ur school years.

If U feel a really strong tugging in ur body, take a washroom break for a short time and lock the cube door while ur in there, but try to keep release for at home as much as U can.

I can tell from ur statement that ur feeling view is through testosterone, and that's normal at age 14 and up, but try to keep a safe perspective through the experience. That gets easier as U grow up emotionally and fantasy becomes replaced a bit.

Take care younger Dude, and hope that helps a bit

Me! :- )

Do you consider catholic high schools recruiting for their football team cheating?

If they ACTIVELY RECRUIT, then yes, it's cheating.

If they don't actively recruit, then it's all about open enrollment. Because of open enrollment boundaries, private schools would seem to have an advantage over public schools.

Case in point: De La Salle in Concord, CA. Many say that DLS recruits, but it's really not true. The coach built the program from nothing, and its notoriety built on itself from that point on. I'm sure it's the same for other privates in the nation such as Don Bosco, St. Xavier, Moeller, etc. etc.

However, despite this inherent advantage, most catholic schools are not dominant in football and basketball. I'm from CA, and I can tell you that there are bunch of catholic schools that get rolled by public schools, football and basketball.

Even still, public schools sometimes draw athletes from out of the area. Case in point: in the late 1990s there was a rivalry between two Sacramento, CA, area schools. These schools were like night and day, demographically. One was from a well-to-do area, the other from an economically-depressed area. This rivalry was beyond fierce. Anyway, the star quarterback of the well-to-do school TRANSFERRED to the archrival! How did he do it? His dad bought an apartment within the district of the archrival. There was a big hubbub about recruiting, but they never proved anything.

So, publics can do the same thing as privates. Also, a lot of kids transfer out of private schools back into public schools.

What would you consider a "safe school" when applying to graduate school programs?

Safe in what way? That you won’t get shot? Remember, the people who do the shootings have lost their minds, and that’s not limited by anything about the school, so you’re as likely to get shot at MIT as you are at “John’s College of Barbering and Tooth Pulling”.Safe as far as getting a job when you graduate? That’s up to you. Warm a seat for 4 years in any school and you probably won’t get a good one. Remember, for 4 years, that what’s taught in school isn’t all there is to the subject, and study the things they leave out too, and even if you went to a pretty plain school, your abundant knowledge and your insatiable appetite for more will show through.One course you should take before progressing any further though, and it’s known by many names, but they all mean the same thing - “How to express yourself clearly in writing”.

Which school would you consider better Cal State Los Angeles or San Francisco State University?

I hated San Francisco State when I attended there - it's too foggy most of the year and it's a long bus ride, muni or bart ride into the city. It's really not even in San Francisco but closer to Daily City. First thing I would do would be to visit the colleges. I also did not like the dorms at SF however they have recently build many new dorms however it's still a majority commuter school with most students living at home.

Your decision would probably be based on your major and whether your a southern or Northern Cal girl?

Which Ivy League School Would You Consider Most Conservative?

First of all, there are none that are "conservative." None is more or less conservative or liberal than the next.

It should not concern you. Conservative or liberal politics won't come into play unless you simply want to hear your own views fed back to you. Most of the material you will learn in law school will not be leftist or rightist politics. It will be criminal law, civil law, torts, contracts, IP law, etc. Only when you take Constitutional law does it get that ideological.

If you want a school that leans more conservative and has an excellent reputation consider Notre Dame, Pepperdine and the University of Chicago

PE has no idea what the hell he's talking about. PRINCETON DOESN'T HAVE A LAW SCHOOL.

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