Pie wrote:well.. it's just that they teach us a whole lot of things we don't need to lern.
You are, what, thirteen years old? What the heck gives you the right to decide that you don't need to know something? You are a child.
Math: You NEED to know math, or you will get ripped off every day of your life. I used to think I wouldn't need algebra-- I now do algebra on a weekly basis. I used to think I wouldn't need geometry, and I did very poorly in that class. I use geometry on a weekly basis-- for FUN.
Science: This whole thread illustrates how your lack of understanding of science shows you to be ignorant. Scientific inquiry is a process by which one becomes a more critical thinker, capable of seeing past basic assumptions and forming logical and well-thought questions that other people won't laugh at.
Spelling: Spelling can and IS taught through tests and repetition and READING. The more you read, the better you spell. You say that in your case it would take individual attention-- I don't think so. Again and again and again, you have shown that you simply don't want to use the most basic tools available to you to improve. Your laziness is not an excuse. It's a reason for your failure, but it in no way excuses it.
Haiku: Haiku are beautiful and they are the EASIEST form of poetry to write. The reason your teacher has you learn them is because human beings are more than calculators-- we are human. We feel, we express our feelings, we share-- and poetry is one way we do that. You may not enjoy poetry, and that's fine. But I am sure there are things in your classes that made you say "wow, that's neat, I should try that more" and pursue it. Haiku is the entry drug to poetic expression.
I met an astronaut when I was thirteen years old and, when asked what classes we should focus on, what math we needed, which sciences were more important, she said, very simply "English: if you can't communicate, you can't get anywhere."
Learn it. Love it. Or you will fail at everything you do.