I never had any classes or went to theatre school like a lot of actors, so all of my training has been on stage with different directors. That was a pretty good school room.
I was a jock, hardcore sports all the way down the line, but I heard that if you auditioned for this arts school, you got time off school, and that sounded good to me.
If you're poor, you don't often live near a good school. If it's a competitive public school program, our kids are not prepared to enter those programs.
You basically have to be willing to devote your life to journalism if you want to break in. Treat it like it's medical school or law school.
I love religion and have contemplated going back to school to get a world religion degree.
Me, I was waiting tables of 13 and married at 19. I graduated from public schools, and taught elementary school.
I was always in plays at school and in school concerts - you could say I liked to show off.
Mayer Hawthorne's old school pop-R&B homages are so meticulous that it's tempting to overrate his pipes.
I've never progressed very far from my days as a smart aleck in middle school.
Sophomore year, I got hit in the stomach playing football, and I was out of school for four months. I was in the hospital for two and then out of school for two.
I hated school. Even to this day, when I see a school bus it's just depressing to me. The poor little kids.
I attended Professional Children's School in Manhattan because my ballet and modern dance schedules were intensive and had started to interfere with regular school hours.
I played trumpet in middle school, and then I had to get braces, so I had to stop playing trumpet and start playing drums.
The 'niche' effect of charter schools guarantees a swift and vicious deepening of class and racial separation.
I went to night school and summer school, I made that whole year up and I actually graduated on time. Also, I got a part-time job at the radio station.
And I spent that time working as an insurance adjuster and going to law school in the evening, and then when I left law school, I joined the Department of Justice in Washington.
I used to spend a lot of time at football training, but that time was later spent in amateur acting classes and my local youth theatre, in plays at school and after-school clubs. That filled the void.
Ninety percent of the students take the 'preferred lender.' Why? Because that's the nature of the relationship. You trust the school. The school is in a position of authority.
Each country thinks its school is in a specific crisis, without ever linking the school's crisis to that of the society around it.
In my second year, after moving to the Medical School, I began the courses of Anatomy and Physiology. I had begun to see that I was interested in cells and their functions.
As kids, we traded 'I like Ike' and 'All the way with Adlai' buttons in elementary school.