I used to think my best subject was math. But the scores told me otherwise. I was always best at english even though I hated it because I was perfectionistic and spent too damn much time on stuff because I didn't want to sound stupid even if the topic was and my teachers ended up liking what I wrote. I was still good at math, but what mistakes I made were silly things like transferring negative signs or some such stuff.
Now, I enjoy my advanced literacy. And it really wasn't learned in classes either. It almost all comes from my love of a good book. Adventure types. When you read that much, many of the nuances of grammar and spelling just sink into you and becomes second nature.
I liked geometry. I paid attention in class, so I understood all of it and was leading the whole class in grades. It was pretty easy, with logical steps.
In high school... very few of my classes were 'regular.' They were almost all pre-IB/AP or actual AP classes during upper classmen years. I have to admit to zoning out during world geography and not learning much from economics. I took AP chem in highschool instead of biology or physics, but it ended up kicking my ass. But in college, I breezed through the entire first two semesters thanks to it. I still hate all them entropy and enthalpy bs and solubility factors.
Organic chem was a nightmare at first, but once you really got the hang of the rules and how the atoms and molecules interact, it was actually getting pretty interesting. what was lacking was better connection to real-life and lab applications. most of the time in labs, it was measure shit out righ tand do the steps in order and you would get it righ tand a passing grade.
Physics used to seem like a pain in the ass from the high school summer class (before freshman year, mind you) that was literally an intro to both chem and physics in the same class. took it in college. I loved that shit. Had a GREAT proffessor who had great stories, examples, and demonstrations. Like, when it came to calculating gravity based on distance and mass (cuz ya'll know how the theory is that mass attracts each other, which is what causes gravity). I was the only one who got it right that a person in a cave would weigh less, not just because you have less mass below you (since you calculate using the radius of the amount of earth below you) but because there is now mass above you pulling you up. So theoretically at the center of the planet, if it were hollow and hospitable, there would be no gravity. We'd be floating there, because you have mass below you pulling at you and mass above you pulling you in the other direction. Then there was all that stuff about currents, magnetic fields, circuits and stuff, as well as pressure... Physics 1 and 2 were good classes.
PE? I left PE behind in middle school. was on team sports for the high school each year. wrestling, soccer, swimming, and swimming in that order.
I really miss my japanese teacher and class. getting the counting and numbers right was always a bitch though and... so much kanji. ><
Spanish- I knew more than enough to coast through the classes. But I ended up forgetting most of it. And nowadays, I kinda get spanish and japanese mixed together because of some of the similarities in sounds.
java programming kicked my rear. not a fan of programming at all. Art in high school was fun. Art in college is srs bzness and no fun at all.
I kinda miss band.
US and world history was interesting in the short term, but very forgettable once testing was done.
Anatomy and physiology... terrible. so much trivia and detail to memorize. form and function and stuff.