Does anyone here regret trying to be "cool"?

<p>

Regardless of how bitter a high school instructor is, it is not to his best interest to fail his students. Flunking too many students reflects negatively on the instructor as well as the students. </p>

<p>For this reason, most high school teachers and even college professors will make an effort to pass his students. This is not to say every instructor is going to hand everyone an “A”; but merely that they give students D’s or F’s very infrequently.</p>

<p>

I would actually like to toss the ball back to you and invite you to look up the GPA distributions at College Board and find a college that will accept a student with a transcript littered with D’s and F’s.</p>

<p>There are community colleges that are obligated to accept practically any student but even their GPA distributions will be higher than the OP’s GPA from averaging all the B students. The other exception are for-profit colleges.</p>

<p>

On the contrary, my “school experience” does not completely dismiss the OP’s school experience. The OP indicated that his high school courses weren’t “hard” for him, not that they were “Harvard Westlake” quality courses that some of you are arbitrarily arguing. </p>

<p>I am building on and reinterpreting the OP’s account of his high school experience while those who disagree with me are the ones dismissing the OP’s experience completely and proposing highly irregular, off tangent alternate experiences.</p>