Sam, 13, walked into science class with a sick feeling in his stomach. The day he had been dreading had finally arrived.
Every year, millions of dead frogs are shipped to schools across the country. Their purpose? To be dissected—or cut open—by students.
Many of Sam’s classmates were excited about their assignment. But not Sam. He had two choices. He could dissect the frog or get a zero. He chose to dissect. “I just tried not to think about it and focused on what I was learning,” he says.
Sam, 13, felt sick as he walked into science class. The day he had been dreading had arrived.
Every year, millions of dead frogs arrive in schools across the country. Their purpose? To be dissected (cut open) by students.
Many of Sam’s classmates were excited about their assignment. But not Sam. He had two choices: He could dissect the frog or get a zero. He chose to dissect.
Sam, 13, walked into science class with a sick feeling in his stomach. The day he had been dreading had finally arrived.
Every year, millions of dead frogs arrive in schools across the country. Their purpose? To be dissected—or cut open—by students.
Many of Sam’s classmates were excited about their assignment, but Sam wasn’t. He had two choices: He could dissect the frog or get a zero. He chose to dissect. “I just tried not to think about it and focused on what I was learning,” he says.