The difference between school and life? In school, you're taught a lesson and then given a test. In life, you're given a test that teaches you a lesson.
The difference between school and life? In school, youâre taught a lesson and then given a test. In life, youâre given a test that teaches you a lesson.
âTom Bodett
Education is what remains after one has forgotten everything he learned in school.
âAlbert Einstein
Schoolâs a weird thing. Iâm not sure it works.
âJohnny Depp
I had a terrible education. I attended a school for emotionally disturbed teachers.
âWoody Allen
They say that we are better educated than our parentsâ generation. What they mean is that we go to school longer. It is not the same thing.
âRichard Yates
There is nothing so stupid as the educated man if you get him off the thing he was educated in.
 âWill Rogers
Education is the progressive discovery of your own ignorance.
âWill Durant
In the schoolroom, her quick mind had taken readily that strong starch of unexplained rules and disconnected facts which saves ignorance from any painful sense of limpness.
âGeorge Eliot
School-days, I believe, are the unhappiest in the whole span of human existence. They are full of dull, unintelligible tasks, new and unpleasant ordinances, brutal violations of common sense and common decency. It doesnât take a reasonably bright boy long to discover that most of what is rammed into him is nonsense, and that no one really cares very much whether he learns it or not.
âH.L. Mencken
No one can look back on his schooldays and say with truth that they were altogether unhappy.
âGeorge Orwell
I like a teacher who gives you something to take home to think about besides homework.
âEdith Ann (Lily Tomlin)
Our progress as a nation can be no swifter than our progress in education.
âJohn F. Kennedy
True terror is to wake up one morning and discover that your high school class is running the country.
âKurt Vonnegut, Jr
Education is hanging around until youâve caught on.
â Robert Frost
I am always willing to learn, however I do not always like to be taught.
â Winston Churchill
Academies that are founded at public expense are instituted not so much to cultivate menâs natural abilities as to restrain them.
â Baruch Spinoza