illodous
Angels...
Well, I have to say that I've had a similar incident with a student in Ancient History who, frankly, showed up less than a quarter of the time and yet was allowed to sit the Trials and will now sit the HSC and drag the class down. But let it be considered - he was struggling quite severely with family and socio-economic difficulties. So before you point the finger, maybe it's a better idea to think about why this person is having ever-so-many days off. It must be both embarrasing and demoralising for her.ells_ellie said:Ok.. someone please tell me what they think of this.
Well there's this chick who constantly took days off from school before her assessments to do them. And she did it for all her assessments. Even when during the trials she took days off to study for them. Then she expects to get the notes she missed out on from other people and gets annoyed at people who refuse to give them to her. And when confronted about the taking days off and telling her that it is a disadvantage for other people- she just doesn't see any wrong in it.
Is this considered unfair? Because i think it is, i mean.. there are so many people who would like extra days to study but can't because of fear in missing out important work or just have strict parents who refuse to let them have the day off and plus it's quite wrong, wouldn't you feel guilty if you did that? Like you're having an advantage over other people because you have more time to do your studying and assessments?
Just want your opinions about this matter..