Well, I'm glad for you! It's great that your school offers those kind of opportunities and advanced classes and such. And I do agree, it's not good to dismiss school - but at the moment I'm doing A-levels which is different to GCSE's which came before it. GCSE's allow you to get a job, and those are important. A-levels just push you into depression.
I'm not sure how to compare GCSE and A-level to an, err, I'm going to assume American school system... If I read correctly, GCSE would be compared to Senior High School level, except GCSE's have examinations and coursework (kinda like projects, units, whatever you call them. I think in the US, there are separate subjects for things like geometry and algebra. We have them in combined Math class) and I believe A-Level is equivalent to an undergraduate program/community college/tech institution qualification, except again we have exams and there is no graduation ceremonies for either GCSE or A level.
Anyhow, in the countryside where I live, they like to put people into two categories; people who become lawyers and work for big companies to bankrupt single parents, or people who go into the army and are forced to kill innocent people. (no offence to the lawyers or soldiers amongst us) Neither particularly appeal to me, so I gotta make do, unfortunately. I suppose school is like a train track, you follow it correctly and you get there. Starting from scratch is like having just some ground. You need to make the bricks, shape the rails, build the train and hope that it all fits together. If it does, then other people come along and bring their tracks and trains with them. If you fuck up, oh well, take it all apart and build it again. Wait, why am I talking about train sets?
Because it's past Telstar's bedtime and he's delirious, that's why. Hmm. Maybe I should consider sleeping.