All my life has consisted of me being in school 5 days a week for 8 hours a day for the last 12+ years. Iâve experienced what itâs like to be in private school and what its like to be in the public school system as well. Even though both experiences were very different the outcome was the same, my teachers didnât seem to care about teaching or helping students. In Gattos article âAgainst Schoolâ he speaks about how corrupt the school system and isnât truly affective. Now i donât entirely agree with his logic but i also believe a lot of what he says is true, he might be onto something.  Â
  The Idea that schooling can make children gullible and mindless doesnât surprise me. Almost my entire life of being in school, being constantly told  to sit at a desk all day. Being told what to do and what not to by all your teachers every second of the day, than they go home to do more work that theyâve probably already forgotten all the material they learned that day can be really stressful. I know as a child who has grown up like this, this has put a lot of stress on me and my fellow classmates. Iâve never been an A student and sometimes i wasnât a B student either, i struggled in some areas more than others but i tried about as hard as a child usually does. Which is trying hard once- I fail- and i give up. Meaning that i put effort into once and once i fail i have no motivation to want to try again. And when i did fail most of my teachers growing up never really noticed or some just didnât care to help. Now iâm not saying every teacher out there is like this, iâve had many teachers that i looked up too and will forever remember them.
The idea that going to school five days a week for 8 hours a day for 12 years+ straight doesnât always guarantee success. What i mean by this is that all our lives we are taught that education is the most important thing which yes essentially it is important, But it always isnât the case with some people. There are many people in this world that are living proof of that, people like Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, and Mark Zuckerberg succeeded beyond reach and barely had their foot in the door. Again disclaimer i also don’t believe the same rules apply for everyone obviously, if you want to be a doctor you have to go to school for it there’s no exception. But higher education isnât for everyone, back in the day around segregation going to university was considered a luxury because the only the rich white people could afford it because there was rarely any colleges accessible for people of color. Itâs a beautiful thing that it is accessible in America now as it wasnât back then, but standards for success is to overwhelming. In 2019 seeking higher education is a necessity to get any job, even Mcdonalds requires some college experience.