Hmm well I dont think I will be parting with all my school secrets just yet
I was an angel at kindergarten up to my first year of high school. The High schools in South Africa are mostly all, if not all either all boys or all girls. Very rigid and would not stand for one swear word, and if you got caught smoking you were expelled instantly. In my days at school I kept very much to myself but was privy to a small group of girls (went to an all girls High School) In the first term of my High School career, I got caught smoking in the toilet and was politely asked to leave the school, lest I give it a bad name (too late she cried!) So it was off to another all girls High School. I baffled the teachers getting A's in subjects I liked and F's in subjects I hated. In math class I used to read and eventually got a seat outside the class with my name on it, and that is where I spent the rest of the year. When it came to year end exams, I wrote my name on the paper and left the room (they did give me 2 marks for wrighting my name!) I ended up winning the Drama honors blazer and the Biology blazer 3 years running, much to my schools disgust

(we wore uniforms, brown skirts,white shirts, long sleeves in winter, a tie and brown hats. If you got honors your blazer was different from the normal brown ones) The schools in South Africa are very very different to the schools here, all have uniforms. Girls have to wear a certain color underware (yes the teachers checked!) your skirt had to be exactly 2 fingers above your knee-cap, your socks had to be 4 fingers from the top of your ankle, nails were not allowed to be over the tops of your finger. No jewelery, No dyed hair or strange hair cuts. If you had long hair it had to be tied up with the school color pony holders, not one hair was allowed on your face. Your school shoes were to be polished daily. The boys were the same, they had hair inspections too, no hair touching the ears or the back of the shirt colar, shiny shoes and ironed clothes at all times. Most girls, myself included went to finishing or deportment school

learned how to wear clothes that matched and which fork to use at a dinner party. Quite funny actually. Guess South Africa never really got rid of the old fashioned collonial lifestyle alltogether now did they!
I had a very sharp tongue which got me into detention weekly. It was never disrespectful, but I had a problem with authority and had very different opinions to many of my teachers and refused to keep quiet. So in the detention hall I had a chair with my name on it too! (anyone see a pattern here?) lol
Well in the last term of my Matric year (last year of high school) my parents suffered a huge financial loss, and I was unable to continue high school. Education is not free in South Africa! Those are pretty much my tales of school, oh and you had to do some school sport, it was compulsary. I was head of the drama department and captain of the gymnastic club. The poor school did not know quite what to do with me.