My first degree came years before my second. I had wanted to be a physicist, but I flunked calculus.
I almost flunked first grade and also the second, third, forth, and fifth; but my younger brother was in the grade behind me and he was a brain and nobody wanted to have me be in the same grade as him, so they kept passing me. I never learned how to spell, graduated from eighth grade counting on my fingers to do simple addition, and in general was not a resounding academic success.
That's correct, I flunked out of high school twice because I couldn't write.
Sometimes I can't figure designers out. It's as if they flunked human anatomy.
Hard to be a physics major at Rice University if you have flunked calculus.
I think that everybody, even if they had the best high school experience, there was something about high school. Whether you dropped a pass, or whether you flunked the test, or you didn't go to the prom.
College had little effect on me. I'd have been the same writer if I'd gone to MIT, except I'd have flunked out sooner.
I can't understand why I flunked American history. When I was a kid there was so little of it.
I feel like I flunked at adolescence really badly. I found it really difficult.
Nobody ever flunked a science museum