<p>What are the benefits of it, in your words?</p>
<p>Learning. Socializing and human interaction. Job/life preparation.</p>
<p>2 go 2 collige 4 mor skool</p>
<p>So you can ace your SAT and go to HYPSM or an Ivy and be super successful.</p>
<p>free lunch and hanging with friends, not making your parents cry, not getting the law involved</p>
<ul>
<li>Education made easier for less motivated students.</li>
<li>Teachers might be able to answer questions the book might not answer.</li>
<li>Teachers are often in a better position to instruct than parents or the student himself.</li>
<li>Social aspect.</li>
<li>Opportunity for ECs, athletics, group activities, and leadership positions.</li>
<li>Having competent instructors in the first few years (K-8, or even K-10) is important for forming solid study habits and learning background information. For example, I’m in a better position now to self-study subjects than I was back in the 7th grade).</li>
</ul>
<p>To learn how to memorize mostly useless information…yay.</p>
<p>
Quoted For Truth</p>
<p>So you can truthfully brag on CC.</p>
<p>To see my friends.</p>
<p>And to waste 7 hours of my life every day being bored to death while teachers who care more about their paychecks than anything else lecture about stuff that I could care less about. I love learning, just not in a school setting. I find it torturous.</p>
<p>Go to school in case we are bored by sheer living-I mean drinking eating sleeping without anything else. </p>
<p>Or, to learn something you hate. Take myself as an example. I hate biology very much; if homeschooling, I won’t ever learn biology myself-so I have to go to school to learn it, because it’s useful but I hate it.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>That’s pretty much it.</p>
<p>You gotta play the game.</p>
<p>I actually enjoy school sometimes, because it keeps me from doing what I’m doing now, which is nothing.</p>
<p>Because I have to. Yea…life bites.</p>