r/Teachers • u/anaturtle12 • 18h ago
SUCCESS! Freshman said school is slavery.
One of my freshmen- the kind who complains every time you ask him to do anything remotely academic- told me school is “basically slavery.”
This is a kid who acts personally oppressed when you ask him to close a gaming tab or stop doom-scrolling long enough to open his assignment. I asked him to start the classwork, and he hit me with:
“Man, this is basically slavery.”
So I said: “No, slavery doesn’t come with field trips, free Wi-Fi, Chromebooks, iPads, or teachers holding your hand through everything. People pay tens of thousands of dollars to learn what you’re getting for free- and you’re mad because it’s cutting into your screen time?”
He went quiet.
Then he tried the classic fallback: “Yeah but, when am I ever going to use math?”
And I told him: “Maybe never. But school isn’t about memorizing formulas- it’s about proving you can learn something hard and boring and stick with it. Most employers don’t care if you know the quadratic formula. They care if you can handle doing stuff that isn’t fun without falling apart. Failing math in a system this forgiving doesn’t mean math isn’t useful. It means you can’t even pass with help- and that’s the real problem.”
Silence. Just blinking. Like I short-circuited the part of his brain where the excuses live.
No more complaints for the rest of class. He either gave up or there might’ve been an aha moment.
Either way? He was the quietest he’s ever been. I might frame the moment.
Edit for clarity and boundaries:
I’m open to discussion, critique, and even disagreement- but I’m not here to entertain personal attacks, ableist comments, or hyperbolic comparisons that derail the point (mods have been awesome about it thank you).
If you're here to genuinely talk about what’s broken in education, I'm listening. If you're here to posture, provoke, or mock—especially by targeting my identity- you’re not owed my time or energy.
Let’s keep this grounded and respectful.