<p>"hey what did you get?"
"oh...uhh....78"
"hey, its okay, you have other chances..." (grinning happily) (in their minds prob. saying, 'haha, i beat you')</p>
<p>People didn't really know that I was quite a smarty in the start of the year because in 9th, I was practically failing everything, in 10th I had firsts in 2 subjects plus a second agrogate and they didn't really care much I guess.. I was still on the 'rise' lol</p>
<p>And then they saw a little trend in my tests.. And then all these 'known' smart people started to get a bit suspicious of me, asking me everything - what are you going to be when you grow up, what university are you hoping to get into, what course do you want to do at uni, what final grades did you get last year, what ECs are you doing, etc..</p>
<p>And then the word spread around.. and the known smart people bog me down with questions - "WHAT DID YOU GET??" - they say that with a little smile, you know, trying to be nice, but I know that they just want to be beat the sht out of me.</p>
<p>And when they get a bit more than me, they ALWAYS say, "don't worry you'll do better next time" and I'm like, "i never said I was worried" with a ****ed off smirk.</p>
<p>Oh and when I find out that I got a better score than the other, I give a wide smile (to **** them off) and then I say, oh ok congrats on your score. And I walk off, feeling the heat from the guy.</p>
<p>People generally stay away from asking each other what their grades are. Most people don't care as long as it's an A. And everyone hates when someone's like OMG I GOT A 92 *** I HATE MY LIFE.</p>
<p>And asking people what they got is kinda obnoxious cause it usually means you got a really high score. And if you got a really low score, then you're showing off that you can still pull off an A for the year despite a huge setback.</p>
<p>Anyway, almost all the smart people are best friends with each other, so people are really supportive of each other.</p>
<p>At my school, no one shares test scores unless it's with your close friends. And even then it's only to commiserate about a hard test or celebrate over an easy one ("What an awful test, I got a 72. You?" "71. Way to go."), and in that sense it's not competitive. </p>
<p>However, competition in the long run exists. The unvocalized rivalry exists among a few hypercompetitve ones, in which it is them vs. everyone else, and then vs. each other, even though they are the ones who are usually top 10-15% rather than top 5% (I go to a really competitive school so top 30% is still good). It can get awful--they will dig or try to suck up to get people to reveal grades, and then not-so-silently revel in poor grades. One of them smiled when she heard some of my friends got a B for the year.</p>
<p>It's clearly for college purposes rather than I AM BETTER THAN YOU SO ACCEPT IT. Like NoFX's classmates, they will pepper everyone with questions about colleges they're thinking of, exactly how many AP tests you took or are planning to take, and what you've been doing to prep for the SAT.</p>
<p>There's not one "rival" we all rival against each other, but not like in 9-10th grade. It used to be hardcore, but now that we know each other so well, we're all pretty relaxed and aren't rivalish anymore.</p>
<p>i really wouldnt consider it rivalry but me and a couple of friends (also track teammates) always compare grades just to be goofy. We all get decent grades so its just something dorky we do and none of us are really into school all that much so its just like a 10 second thing</p>
<p>There's not too much rivalry here. Fortunately I'm usually on the upper end of test scores, and usually the top in my science classes.</p>
<p>Most of the people aren't braggarts fortunately. I for one, never ask others for their grades (though they usually tell me), and I only mention mine if they ask for it. They say "congratulations" and I say the same to them, or if they got a bad grade, something like "Don't worry, it's just one grade" (not in a condescending tone though). I can't stand the whole "Haha, I scored higher than you" thing.</p>
<p>So far there hasn't been so much competition at our school. My friends are interested in grades and we often ask each other, but it's not in a competitive/mean type of way (well, semi-competitive. It's mainly just to check how our score stands in the class :)).</p>
<p>Shravas, I get that too! My standardized testing scores were among the highest in my class, so everyone expects me to have super-high grades to match. I'm not a bad student, but there's always someone who makes better grades.</p>
<p>My school is really small, say 40 kids to a class..... I would guess there were one or two people who love to interogate after you get last night's history homework back.... Sometimes I feel like I could ask them what my grade was and they would have the exact number. I just usually humor these people and tell them because our school is so small you could figure it out by proccess of elimination if you really wanted to.... What really bugs me is when the seniors in my classes (I'm a junior, but take a lot of mainly-senior classes) automatically assume they did better than me, and say 'I got a 87 on that test.... You're smart, I bet you got a low B' And then I respond 'Nope, I got a 96....' smile and walk away. It doesn't really matter rank wise or anything, but it really frustrates them.... It is actually quite funny...... They usually don't ask again ;)</p>
<p>wow...people at my school are just like that...and they get really annoyed when they ask you what you got and you're just like "oh I did well" without saying a specific number...and if you just say a grade letter they have to ask exactly what percentage you got...I call that weird.</p>
<p>my school uses edline too but some teachers omit the class rank.</p>