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Science Is for Nerds
My name is A.J. and I hate school.
Why do we need to learn how to read if we have books on CD? Why do we need to learn social studies if that stuff happened a long time ago and we canât do anything about it now? I hate that stuff. But thereâs one subject I really hate.
Andrea Young.
Well, Andrea is not exactly a subject . Sheâs this annoying girl in my class. Even her curly brown hair is annoying.
âGuess what, A.J.?â Andrea said as we were putting our backpacks away.
âYour butt,â I replied. (Anytime somebody asks, âGuess what?â you should always say, âYour butt.â Thatâs the first rule of being a kid.)
âI know what A.J. stands for,â Andrea said.
âDo not.â
âDo too .â
We went back and forth like that for a while. Thereâs no way Andrea couldknow what A.J. stands for. I never told anyone. Even my best friends, Ryan and Michael, donât know. If anyone ever found out what A.J. stands for, Iâd have to get a new name. Iâd have to leave town.
âA.J. stands forââ
Andrea never got the chance to finish her sentence because our teacher, Miss Daisy, came in.
âEnough chitchatting,â Miss Daisy said. âItâs time for Show and Share.â
Oh man! I forgot all about Show and Share! We were supposed to bring in something that starts with the letter D and tell the class about it. I looked in my desk for a D word. Nothing. I looked inmy pockets. All I had was lunch money.
But wait! A dime! âDimeâ begins with D!
âI brought in a dime,â I told Miss Daisy.
âGood,â she said. âWhat can you tell us about the dime, A.J.?â
âItâs worth ten cents,â I said, and everybody laughed even though I didnât say anything funny.
Andrea was waving her hand in the air, and she got called on, of course.
âThe word âdimeâ comes from the Latin word âdecimus,ââ Andrea said.
I hate her.
âVery good, Andrea!â said Miss Daisy. âHow did you know that?â
âI looked it up in my D word,â Andrea said. âI brought in a dictionary . I use it all the time at home to look up words.â
Andrea grinned her little Iâm-so-smart grin.
Ryan, who sits next to me, whispered, âIf she was really smart, she wouldnât have to look stuff up.â
âAndrea, would you please look up the word âscienceâ?â asked Miss Daisy. âS-C-I-E-N-C-E.â
What a dumb spelling! Thereâs no reason why that word should have a C in it. Andrea turned the pages of her dictionary.
âSâ¦S-Aâ¦S-C,â she said. âHere it is. âScience is knowledge made up of an orderly system of facts that have been learned from study, observation, and experiments.ââ
âVery good!â
Andrea smiled her I-know-everything smile and said she was going to keep her dictionary on her desk from now on in case she had to look up any other words.
Why canât a box of dictionaries fall on her head?
âI have good news,â Miss Daisy said. âWe have a new teacher at Ella Mentry School. His name is Mr. Docker, and he used to be a real scientist. Heâs retirednow, but he agreed to come back to school to teach us science.â
That was good news? It sounded like bad news to me. We never had to learn science before. Now, just because some old guy doesnât like being retired, we had to learn a new subject. It wasnât fair.
Why did I have to learn science? Itâs not like I was going to be a scientist someday. When I grow up, Iâm going to be a football player. I play Pee Wee football. Tackling people is fun.
Suddenly Mr. Klutz, our principal, poked his bald head into the doorway.
âHas anybody seen Mr. Docker?â he asked. âI think he ran away.â
âWeâd better line up in ABC order and go look for
Barbara Weitz
Debra Webb, Regan Black
Melissa J. Morgan
Cherie Nicholls
Clive James
Michael Cadnum
Dan Brown
Raymond Benson
Piers Anthony
Shayla Black Lexi Blake