I went to a high school, I took tests, I took finals, I went to football games - I did the whole thing. Because I really wanted to have that normalcy.
When I graduated from high school, I got accepted to York University, Fine Arts film program.
25 was my number in high school and college. But when I got traded to Lakers, it was retired, and Derek Fisher had 2, so I was stuck with 5. Nothing more special behind it than that.
I had been on the junior Olympic team in high school for trampoline; I could do twenty-six back flips in a row.
I played in a punk rock band in high school called the High Heel Flip Flops. I was the drummer. I played drums for, like, four years.
I really wished I'd learned Spanish. I took it all in high school and was planning on trying to be fluent in it. I would get Selena tracks and sing with them and stuff like that.
That's correct, I flunked out of high school twice because I couldn't write.
I got kicked out of high school, went to 3 different high schools and summer school and extra night school just so I could maybe graduate and try to make it up, because I flunked pretty much my entire freshman year, mainly because I just never showed up.
I flunked three grades before I got out of high school.
Growing up in college, in high school, I was the focal point.
In high school, my prom date fooled around with another guy - on prom night!
Math and science fields are not the only areas where we see the United States lagging behind. Less than 1 percent of American high school students study the critical foreign languages of Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Korean or Russian, combined.
I was way behind physically in high school. They had weight bars that were about forty-five pounds. I couldn't handle them. Couldn't even put the weights on. It was embarrassing. So I always figured out ways to avoid lifting when I was young.
I think the first concert I ever went to was maybe a Five Iron Frenzy concert or something when I was in high school.
I played basketball and soccer my freshman year in high school.
I played baseball up until my freshman year of high school. That was my main sport. I played third base.
It is one thing to take as a given that approximately 70 percent of an entering high school freshman class will not attend college, but to assign a particular child to a curriculum designed for that 70 percent closes off for that child the opportunity to attend college.
When I was in high school, I had a gambling problem.
Growing up, at high school, we all used to wear Champion garments, which, in America, are standard-issue gym uniforms.
I didn't make a lot of friends in high school. It's a cruel time, and I was very geeky.