Answer:
of course...lol
Answer:
koolproxy.com or proxybrowser.com
Answer:
sure, make it easy goodevil
Answer:
of course theres always around. we have them to so if you go up to a teacher and say i need to see this site for homework they can unblock it. or just do a google search there are sites that aren't blocked on there that can help
Answer:
that is help, take a lesson from namy goodevil
Answer:
maybe you should actually stick to what you are asked to do, rather than try to find ways to get around your school work.
Answer:
kproxy.com rossjohnson.biz/liberty
Answer:
also. on the schools blocking sites, they might be the same, but like go to further options and like the user name is Bypass pass bypass it should be the same. :)
Answer:
Here's the thing, kid, I pay taxes that pay for your education and I do not want to pay for you to go internet surfing or playing on myspace when you should be doing your school work, so get over it and wait until you get home to check your messages.
Answer:
Hrm... He/she maybe not chose that school, maybe not even to go to school at all... There is a bit of a paradox in this. The adult world is imposing rules on the kids. Parents decide because they know it is good for the kids. Parents AND other adults are paying tax through their noses for the fun of imposing stuff on their kids, who didn't ask for it. And the kids don't have a saying, because they have no rights in the adult world. But also kids know somewhere within themselves, that education is something good and needed. But rules and regulations are there to be tested, to be bypassed, the extent of the limits to be tried. Especially if it's somebody else's rules. That force is a good force, it fosters creativity and a mind to not buy arguments unquestioned. That is beneficial for society too, in the long run. The rules are there for a reason, and the fenced-in group tries them. I see no problem in it as long as neither group gets an exaggerated advantage. But then somewhere there is a line. A time where parents' ambitions may have gone far beyond the kids' ambitions. Parents know the competing world and they are afraid that the kid will be a loser if not doing it all, here and now! That is putting demands on the kids, who may feel unfit to meet the demands. And thus become unhappy. I would rather like to see a system where a kid could take a break for a year or two, maybe work in the local supermarket or something, and then easily get back in school when feeling motivated. But the pressure from the adult, competing world is instead reaching down in very young ages, making kids feel insufficient and stressed. I believe that this is rather endorsing an escape from reality, reverting into other activities than school work.
