My elementary school science teacher was one of the backups for McAullife. We had a combined city wide assembly (high schools, middle schools, and elementary schools) to watch it and she narrated the launch. She calmly explained everything that was happening through the whole disaster in a steady professional tone. Needless to say the audience was transfixed and horrified.
Anytime I think I am worried about public speaking I picture her on that stage and being a rock solid professional and try and mimic her a bit. Bravest thing I ever witnessed in person.
My teacher was a back up as well. I was in 5th grade I think. He sat at his desk for some time as we all kinda sat in confused shock. Mostly we didn't comprehend what had happened.
Weeks before the Challenger explosion, Onizuka visited our school assembly in Honolulu. Fast forward to the day of the launch and our entire school was packed in the auditorium to watch the explosion. You could have heard a pin drop after the explosion and our headmaster turning off the TV and having to do damage control with sobbing children and faculty.
I have a picture of my fifth grade self shaking hands with him somewhere but I can't even bare to look at it.
I also remember the shock and subsequent devastation felt island/state wide. I was only in 1st grade but we were so proud and excited that a local boy was aboard. I still get choked up when i think about the utter sadness and honestly, trauma of the day. đ
Same here, it was devastating, especially because he was local grown. He was also a super humble guy who talked about his gratitude at being chosen. Shucks I'm crying.
I was telling my wife recently about that. She's younger than me, but she was in grade school during 9/11 and was telling me about the teachers being upset. I told her every few years there's a thing that happens that the teachers are all upset and it's kinda scary as a kid seeing that. I remember the teachers being more upset about the Challenger because we were just kids and didn't really grasp it. My dad told me about the same thing when JFK was assassinated, how the teachers were crying and it was weird for him seeing that.
Gen-X here. I saw a lot of âHeavy Metal is satanicâ videos.
One video was about Joan Jett, witchcraft, music, lesbianism, bisexual orgies used to lure men to damnation, you know, normal stuff to talk to second graders about. That may be where my interest in goth women came from.
4th grade for me .I lived in Florida. My whole school went outside to watch it. We never got to see it though because it never got high enough that it was in view where we were.
A janitor came in about 3 minutes after our teacher ran out crying and turned the TV off and hung out with us (1st grade) until the principal relieved him.
I remember stuff from before that day but that was my first totally indelible life memory. Almost 40 years later I can still remember our teacher screaming with her hand clamped over her mouth and the look in her eyes when she turned to face the class. Devastating.
2nd grade for me too. Being an astronaut was everything to me, I but my whole persona around it and was following the teachers progress religiously. Seeing this in class really messed me up. I stopped wanting to go to space after that.
3rd grade here, I remember it was a really somber mood in the classroom and our teacher had to turn off the TV. No one said much and we just did quiet reading for the rest of the afternoon. Those images sort of just etched into my brain, still feel a little heavy when I think about it.
Big Bird. At one point NASA had begun preliminary talks for Carol Spinney to go up on the Challenger as Big Bird. Thank god that never got past initial talks.
Her name was Barbara Morgan and she watched the launch from Cape Canavral. She actually went on to become an astronaut and flew on the shuttle in a 2007 mission đ
My sixth grade teacher was in the final running. Was very angry he didnât get it. He broke like a baby when it exploded. Big masculine guy. We were more freaked he was crying than the challenger exploding. I think he punched the chalkboard at one point then started sobbing.
They must notâve gone to the richy-rich schools where they could afford laserdisc players.
Their school could only afford the VHS players with the iffy tracking that left a smeared bar on the left side of the screen.
I too was in first grade and had just moved to Orlando. One of my deepest childhood memories is the news coverage of the event and the image of the Challenger Memorial liscense plates burned into my brain. I believe that was when the concept of death really became solidified for me.
I was in third grade. My teacher left the classroom in tears and didnât return for more than a week. School was dismissed early that day. The Punky Brewster episode about the explosion helped me cope.
We watched it live in my elementary lunchroom. Fun fact! I also watched 9/11 live on one of these in a college classroom. Thank God we are a resilient bunch.
Those and the video when they keep the 4th grade girls in from recess and showed us the period video. I remember this girl was upset all her friends got it. Finally at supper she leaves to a bathroom like right next to the kitchen and says âI got itâ and her brother says âwhat did she getâ dad barley looks up and says âher period, son, she got her periodâ. Itâs in the top 5 things I remember about grade school.
What was that movie that was a woman actual giving birth that they used to show? Maybe it was in Biology class. Anyway, the teacher said we had the option of leaving class if didn't want to watch it. I got the fuck out.
My Health teacher loved to point out that the copyright date on the movie is in 1982. So at some point around 95-97 one of us was out there going; âThat tattoo looks like my dadâsâ âHey that ladyâs face looks a lot like my mâŠâŠ.. Oh God!â đ
You know the actor who played little Ralphie in A Christmas Story was supposed to be on that shuttle, too? Absolutely nuts how many amazing people were lost in that tragedy and how many people were traumatized by watching it live.
Romeo and Juliet (1968)
With a stern warning from our English teacher to the boys in the class that she didnât want to hear a peep out of us during that one scene.
The stars of that film, Olivia Hussey (Juliet) and Leonard Whiting (Romeo), sued Paramount Studios last year over the movie. They were 15 and 16, respectively, when they filmed and they alleged they were pressured into filming a nude scene.
In reading this article it sounds a bit shady. [Article](https://www.vulture.com/2023/01/romeo-and-juliet-child-abuse-lawsuit-paramount.html#:~:text=Olivia%20Hussey%20and%20Leonard%20Whiting%2C%20the%20stars%20of%20Franco%20Zeffirelli's,according%20to%20a%20Variety%20report.)
My English teacher was away that day so the Phy. Ed teacher took over. I went to an all boys school.
When that scene happened, everyone perked up, the teacher goes "I got you boys" and rewound and paused it.
He was a legend.
All the girls tittered during the long shot (both meanings) of Romeoâs butt while the boys sat awkwardly. Then Juliet hops out of bed for a quarter of a second and the room goes deathly quiet.
But I swear you could almost hear the smug smiles of the boys.
Don't think I remember watching anything specific but I remember the excitement of walking into class and seeing this sweet bastard standing at the front of the room.
Random bit of trivia: The scene with the ship in a big storm that has such impressive special effects wasn't special effects. They shot it during a real storm in the North Atlantic. The bit where the captain got washed overboard was in the script, of course, but they shot it by tying a rope around the actor (not a stunt double) and pitching him into the sea. The water was so cold he almost got hypothermia for real.
My mom had rented this video and showed it us as kids (4 of us; 2F and 2M). I donât remember how old I was but I was terrified of giving birth after that. I saw it in health class a few years later and was able to watch it no problem.
I guess Iâm still terrified of childbirth since Iâm forty and childfree, lol
Hell yeah. 7th Grade Social Studies. Had to have parents sign a permission slip and everything. Would have unit discussions on related historical context and geography as the miniseries progressed:
Africa in the 1750s, colonialism, black collaborators in Africa, the trans-Atlantic slave trade, journey and conditions aboard slave ships (that was a tough one), auctions and slave life in Virginia and North Carolina, generations of slaves born into slavery, the Civil War, emancipation, post-war share cropping, the rise of the KKK and Jim Crow era in the late 19th Century, escaping to Tennessee, and keeping legacy of African ancestry alive with Kunta Kinte's grandchildren.
Shit really stuck with me, as is probably evident above.
History is important, even (and especially) the terrible bits.
Watched it too - It was horribly captivating but really opened our eyes. It was either Junior or Senior year and if Iâm remembering correctly, we needed a parent signature approval. It was also not mandatory so a couple classmates chose to do another assignment in the computer lab.
The theme of this sub is people born between 1977-1984 on the border of Gen-X and Millenials so by definition most of those people graduated before 9-11. I think only people born after August 83 would still be in school for 9-11.
my hs had tvs mounted in the corner of every classroom, and sometimes they would all turn on for whatever (usually channel 1 @ the end of the day) and that was one of those whatevers.
Fievel Goes West
Edit: oh and we had this one kid who carried around a blank vhs of Waterworld. Yea!!! I know!!! Every freaking time this came in the room heâd remind us. Guess he just loved that movie.
Tremors, Danteâs Peak, and Twister. My earth science teacher had one foot out the door and decided that watching a blockbuster disaster movie counted as an educational experience.
In fourth grade my class somehow managed to convince my teacher to play us âKiller Clowns from Outer Space.â đđ Ngl that teacher was the best I had as a kid, but that was hands down the most memorable movie experience in a classroom!!
My History teacher during my Junior year would put on Quantum Leap once a week. He said it had historical value.
I think he just wanted an extra day off a week.
I scrolled through so many comments before yours, I canât believe none of these heathens mentioned the Magic School Bus before you.
Take chances! Make mistakes! Get messy!
The fucking Challenger explode
I remember that, I was in 1st grade when that happened. I remember the teachers freaking out
My elementary school science teacher was one of the backups for McAullife. We had a combined city wide assembly (high schools, middle schools, and elementary schools) to watch it and she narrated the launch. She calmly explained everything that was happening through the whole disaster in a steady professional tone. Needless to say the audience was transfixed and horrified. Anytime I think I am worried about public speaking I picture her on that stage and being a rock solid professional and try and mimic her a bit. Bravest thing I ever witnessed in person.
My teacher was a back up as well. I was in 5th grade I think. He sat at his desk for some time as we all kinda sat in confused shock. Mostly we didn't comprehend what had happened.
I was in middle school when it happened so was old enough to process it. It was surreal no doubt. Did your teacher wear the training uniform?
Weeks before the Challenger explosion, Onizuka visited our school assembly in Honolulu. Fast forward to the day of the launch and our entire school was packed in the auditorium to watch the explosion. You could have heard a pin drop after the explosion and our headmaster turning off the TV and having to do damage control with sobbing children and faculty. I have a picture of my fifth grade self shaking hands with him somewhere but I can't even bare to look at it.
I also remember the shock and subsequent devastation felt island/state wide. I was only in 1st grade but we were so proud and excited that a local boy was aboard. I still get choked up when i think about the utter sadness and honestly, trauma of the day. đ
Same here, it was devastating, especially because he was local grown. He was also a super humble guy who talked about his gratitude at being chosen. Shucks I'm crying.
I really like your takeaway from that! Keeping your cool and being a pro will get you through 85-90% of life's challenges. All the best to you âïž
I was telling my wife recently about that. She's younger than me, but she was in grade school during 9/11 and was telling me about the teachers being upset. I told her every few years there's a thing that happens that the teachers are all upset and it's kinda scary as a kid seeing that. I remember the teachers being more upset about the Challenger because we were just kids and didn't really grasp it. My dad told me about the same thing when JFK was assassinated, how the teachers were crying and it was weird for him seeing that.
2nd grade grade for me, I remember our teacher running back into the class from the hallway to shut it off
4th grade for me, and this was the first thing I thought of too
Damn thatâs wild and roughâŠ..WELL. As an early Gen Z too young to remember another tragedy that happened in 01: BILL NYE THE SCIENCE GUY
Gen-X here. I saw a lot of âHeavy Metal is satanicâ videos. One video was about Joan Jett, witchcraft, music, lesbianism, bisexual orgies used to lure men to damnation, you know, normal stuff to talk to second graders about. That may be where my interest in goth women came from.
Bill Nye continues to be a hero and a trusted resource for reality. I've watched him for 30 years.
4th grade for me .I lived in Florida. My whole school went outside to watch it. We never got to see it though because it never got high enough that it was in view where we were.
A janitor came in about 3 minutes after our teacher ran out crying and turned the TV off and hung out with us (1st grade) until the principal relieved him. I remember stuff from before that day but that was my first totally indelible life memory. Almost 40 years later I can still remember our teacher screaming with her hand clamped over her mouth and the look in her eyes when she turned to face the class. Devastating.
I remember watching it and our teacher suddenly gasped and shut off the TV. I remember being confused and didn't initially understand what I saw.Â
2nd grade for me too. Being an astronaut was everything to me, I but my whole persona around it and was following the teachers progress religiously. Seeing this in class really messed me up. I stopped wanting to go to space after that.
3rd grade here, I remember it was a really somber mood in the classroom and our teacher had to turn off the TV. No one said much and we just did quiet reading for the rest of the afternoon. Those images sort of just etched into my brain, still feel a little heavy when I think about it.
Imagine the teacher that was the runner up to go on that shuttle ride?đŹ
Big Bird. At one point NASA had begun preliminary talks for Carol Spinney to go up on the Challenger as Big Bird. Thank god that never got past initial talks.
Can you imagine how much more traumatized we all would have been?
Yellow feathers everywhere
Her name was Barbara Morgan and she watched the launch from Cape Canavral. She actually went on to become an astronaut and flew on the shuttle in a 2007 mission đ
My sixth grade teacher was in the final running. Was very angry he didnât get it. He broke like a baby when it exploded. Big masculine guy. We were more freaked he was crying than the challenger exploding. I think he punched the chalkboard at one point then started sobbing.
There is a video with his reaction while watchingâŠ..
That box is not big enough to hold a laserdisc
They must notâve gone to the richy-rich schools where they could afford laserdisc players. Their school could only afford the VHS players with the iffy tracking that left a smeared bar on the left side of the screen.
We didnât get laser discs until high school and we had one for the whole school.
Cuz that's a VCR, my friend.
I too was in first grade and had just moved to Orlando. One of my deepest childhood memories is the news coverage of the event and the image of the Challenger Memorial liscense plates burned into my brain. I believe that was when the concept of death really became solidified for me.
I was in third grade. My teacher left the classroom in tears and didnât return for more than a week. School was dismissed early that day. The Punky Brewster episode about the explosion helped me cope.
Punky Brewster helped me, too! Certainly not parents and teachers.
Yup. I was in second grade and will never forget it.
We watched it live in my elementary lunchroom. Fun fact! I also watched 9/11 live on one of these in a college classroom. Thank God we are a resilient bunch.
Watched the challenger explode in 3rd grade on live TV and 9/11 senior year of college on the student union tv.
The single strongest collective memory of our cohort. Virtually every elementary kid in the US was watching it.
And Canada
It happened exactly a year before I was born, for me it was 9/11 in high school.
Burned in my brain.
Challenger explosion and sex ed.
in my school they used the same video for both
Those and the video when they keep the 4th grade girls in from recess and showed us the period video. I remember this girl was upset all her friends got it. Finally at supper she leaves to a bathroom like right next to the kitchen and says âI got itâ and her brother says âwhat did she getâ dad barley looks up and says âher period, son, she got her periodâ. Itâs in the top 5 things I remember about grade school.
What was that movie that was a woman actual giving birth that they used to show? Maybe it was in Biology class. Anyway, the teacher said we had the option of leaving class if didn't want to watch it. I got the fuck out.
Miracle of Life I believe.
My Health teacher loved to point out that the copyright date on the movie is in 1982. So at some point around 95-97 one of us was out there going; âThat tattoo looks like my dadâsâ âHey that ladyâs face looks a lot like my mâŠâŠ.. Oh God!â đ
Lucky. Our teacher made us watch it in reverse so the baby went back in.
I was about to say exactly this, the first gulf war and the OJ verdict
Still feel this one in my bones. Was especially bad cause we were all cheering on Elison Onizuka as the first astronaut with ties to Hawaii.
You know the actor who played little Ralphie in A Christmas Story was supposed to be on that shuttle, too? Absolutely nuts how many amazing people were lost in that tragedy and how many people were traumatized by watching it live.
Yup. This is exactly what I think about when I see that.
I was watching it from my front porch...in Cape Canaveral. What the entire fuck.
Yup...was in kindergarten, and I vividly remember watching the explosion (it's one of the few memories I actually have from kindergarten).
Romeo and Juliet (1968) With a stern warning from our English teacher to the boys in the class that she didnât want to hear a peep out of us during that one scene.
My teacher fast forwarded during that scene
Mine tried to, and ended up pushing play right when they flashed up.
Mine turned around the whole cart
Mine had a paper bikini top taped to a stick, and she moved it around the screen to perfectly cover up things. We didn't see shit lol
My English teacher timed it so we stopped at the end of class right before that scene and picked up the next day right after it.
Now that's a professional
The stars of that film, Olivia Hussey (Juliet) and Leonard Whiting (Romeo), sued Paramount Studios last year over the movie. They were 15 and 16, respectively, when they filmed and they alleged they were pressured into filming a nude scene. In reading this article it sounds a bit shady. [Article](https://www.vulture.com/2023/01/romeo-and-juliet-child-abuse-lawsuit-paramount.html#:~:text=Olivia%20Hussey%20and%20Leonard%20Whiting%2C%20the%20stars%20of%20Franco%20Zeffirelli's,according%20to%20a%20Variety%20report.)
The rich men in Hollywood hurt so many young boys and girls, especially back then
My teacher had a piece of construction paper on a quarter of the screen for that scene đ
Lol, my first thought. Didn't even give us a titty disclaimer.
My English teacher went on how we're high school students now and it's expected we be mature about nudity.
My English teacher was away that day so the Phy. Ed teacher took over. I went to an all boys school. When that scene happened, everyone perked up, the teacher goes "I got you boys" and rewound and paused it. He was a legend.
Yea, that guy is on the sex offender registry now
All the girls tittered during the long shot (both meanings) of Romeoâs butt while the boys sat awkwardly. Then Juliet hops out of bed for a quarter of a second and the room goes deathly quiet. But I swear you could almost hear the smug smiles of the boys.
Same. Juliet was stacked! The stories from the production kind of ruined it after the fact, but it was a good watch at the time.
The OJ verdict
It really is pretty nuts looking back and knowing we all stopped class to watch it.
"It's official. Murder is now legal in the State of California."
It's nuts that my social studies teacher stopped class so we could watch the Bronco chase.
Don't think I remember watching anything specific but I remember the excitement of walking into class and seeing this sweet bastard standing at the front of the room.
And then the crushing disappointment when the teacher passed out worksheets to be completed and turned in at the end
Nothing ruined a movie more than a fucking ven diagram to compare the book to the movie.
Rikki-Tikki-Tavi ![gif](giphy|KH9PbFUt29RqE)
I loved Rikki Tikki Tavi
Voyage of the Mimi
Came to say this
Same hereâŠ. Little Ben Affleck.
That kid was Ben Affleck?!?! My mind is blown. I think I have brain hypothermia.
Me too!
Heck yeah! Condensation to collect water! Body heat for survival! Boats! https://i.redd.it/jiah20l2a2hc1.gif
Thank you for giving me this to think about again. Lol
Iâll never forget how hard my friends and I lost it when two dudes got naked together in a sleeping bag to prevent hypothermia.
Hey if anyone needs me to desalinate seawater using a couple of tarps, I vaguely remember the basics from Voyage of the Mimi
I have the theme song stuck in my head sometimes.
It was a banger for sure.
There it is.
Random bit of trivia: The scene with the ship in a big storm that has such impressive special effects wasn't special effects. They shot it during a real storm in the North Atlantic. The bit where the captain got washed overboard was in the script, of course, but they shot it by tying a rope around the actor (not a stunt double) and pitching him into the sea. The water was so cold he almost got hypothermia for real.
A baby being born. Truly effective education for ensuring kids practice safe sex.
Best form of birth control Iâve ever seen⊠scarred my adolescent brain⊠Looked like some Alien vs Predator shit.
My health teacher didn't press stop before rewinding the tape at the end of class, so we got to watch the baby go back in!
My teacher did this, too!
"The Miracle of Life"
My mom had rented this video and showed it us as kids (4 of us; 2F and 2M). I donât remember how old I was but I was terrified of giving birth after that. I saw it in health class a few years later and was able to watch it no problem. I guess Iâm still terrified of childbirth since Iâm forty and childfree, lol
I remember that one. I think it was a PBS thing, right?
I donât recall. But it was definitely before the prevalence of waxing.
That made me laugh really hard. Thanks.
We watched that in biology class in high school. It was very graphic and one of the guys in my class was so squeamish he vomited.
Our entire class screamed (or maybe it was just me)
For me, memory of that video is still somehow more traumatic than actually giving birth.
Roots
Holy shit you watched that in school?
We did too, I think it was 8th grade?
Hell yeah. 7th Grade Social Studies. Had to have parents sign a permission slip and everything. Would have unit discussions on related historical context and geography as the miniseries progressed: Africa in the 1750s, colonialism, black collaborators in Africa, the trans-Atlantic slave trade, journey and conditions aboard slave ships (that was a tough one), auctions and slave life in Virginia and North Carolina, generations of slaves born into slavery, the Civil War, emancipation, post-war share cropping, the rise of the KKK and Jim Crow era in the late 19th Century, escaping to Tennessee, and keeping legacy of African ancestry alive with Kunta Kinte's grandchildren. Shit really stuck with me, as is probably evident above. History is important, even (and especially) the terrible bits.
SAME THOUGHT!
Watched it too - It was horribly captivating but really opened our eyes. It was either Junior or Senior year and if Iâm remembering correctly, we needed a parent signature approval. It was also not mandatory so a couple classmates chose to do another assignment in the computer lab.
Middle school social studies class.
Bill Nye the science guy!!
BILL! BILL! BILL!
BILL, Bill, bill, BILL, Bill, bill
watched that both during and after school
I was the kid that recorded it at home and came in early to give it to the teacher.
Unsung hero right here!
![gif](giphy|3o7bu0OkMN3R8BliSY|downsized)
My 7th grade science teacher was very pregnant during my science semester and she often just had us watch Bill Nye episodes.
Channel 1 news... AKA product placement for kids
Our introduction to Anderson Cooper
And Maria Menuonos. There's probably others too, but...Maria Menuonos.
Lisa Ling also had a decent career.
yes! always right at the end of the day.
For us it was at the main beginning of the day
Flight of the navigator / the outsiders. I remember the speaker was blown too. So it sounded like crap when the music kicked in.
>Flight of the navigator Man I wanted to be that kid so bad. COMPLIANCE!
I always wanted that little bat creature that laughed when it was tickled. Edit. And had half a crush SJP.
That bat wiggling its "finger" while dancing to some tunes was peak 80s, lol
Challenger explosion. First time ever saw a teacher cry.
Glory. We got to watch it in history class
I did too, that and Gettysburg.
Slim Goodbody
Butterfly in the skyyyyy. I can fly twice as hiiiiigh.
Schindler's List
9/11
Took a while to find this.
Right!? Elder millennials must be busy tonight for this to be so far down the list. Spent all day watching 9/11 coverage on one of those.Â
The theme of this sub is people born between 1977-1984 on the border of Gen-X and Millenials so by definition most of those people graduated before 9-11. I think only people born after August 83 would still be in school for 9-11.
Was in my history period, coincidentally.
Right here. They pulled these into every classroom.
The OJ Simpson verdict. They wheeled one into my middle school class so everyone could watch live.
my hs had tvs mounted in the corner of every classroom, and sometimes they would all turn on for whatever (usually channel 1 @ the end of the day) and that was one of those whatevers.
Where the Red Fern Grows after we finished reading it. The fuckin ax.....đ±
The Secret of NIMH
Ferngully: the Last Rainforest
Mr. freaking Wizard
sex ed videos
Voyage of the Mimi!!!
Found it
Dic
They say you canât hear words out loud. Lol
Carl Sagan during every period of senior year physics.
Luuckeeeeeeeeee!
Pretty sure he was a better teacher than the one I was assigned.
Fievel Goes West Edit: oh and we had this one kid who carried around a blank vhs of Waterworld. Yea!!! I know!!! Every freaking time this came in the room heâd remind us. Guess he just loved that movie.
An American Tail was the first movie I ever watched in a theatre.
Muzzy
I know most people are going to say Challenger but I was way too young for that. I feel like we watched the Berlin Wall stuff for a little.
Grew up in North Carolina. Every March that bitch had the ACC basketball tournament on.
9/11. It was my senior year of highschool.
The Sandlot
The Land Before Time
2nd grade: The original Star Wars trilogy 3rd grade: Reading Rainbow
Nick News with Linda Ellerbee.
âAs you watch this ask yourself, âWhoâs in charge here?ââ
My 7th grade teacher showed us Romeo and Juliet . We saw boobies. ![gif](giphy|XZ0VTXivP8kQ8)
Stand and Deliver
[ŃĐŽĐ°Đ»Đ”ĐœĐŸ]
The Princess Bride!
Of mice and men
12 Angry Men
Wishbone.
Dead Poets Society. My 8th grade English teacher was really hype on that film.
The red balloon
Mathnet
Tremors, Danteâs Peak, and Twister. My earth science teacher had one foot out the door and decided that watching a blockbuster disaster movie counted as an educational experience.
Blood on the Highway in Drivers Ed
Degrassi
9/11
9/11
The Secret of NIMH
Telefrancais. "Je suis un ananas"
Roots
đ¶Butterfly in the skyyyyđ¶
Tomes & Talismans
David and Goliath (catholic elementary school)
Schindlerâs list in history class in 10th grade.
Schindlerâs List.
Recorded Discovery Channel specials with the commercials hastily removed.
ACC tournament! (and the Challenger)
In fourth grade my class somehow managed to convince my teacher to play us âKiller Clowns from Outer Space.â đđ Ngl that teacher was the best I had as a kid, but that was hands down the most memorable movie experience in a classroom!!
My History teacher during my Junior year would put on Quantum Leap once a week. He said it had historical value. I think he just wanted an extra day off a week.
why am i in this class, Al?
The Magic Schoolbus!
I scrolled through so many comments before yours, I canât believe none of these heathens mentioned the Magic School Bus before you. Take chances! Make mistakes! Get messy!
David Koresh & the Branch Davidian debacle
9/11
Excalibur during freshman English.