

“Red is a color that scares you naturally, so red and math go together because they are both scary,” Kane said. In contrast, Kane believes that red goes with math and English goes with blue. “It’s just how it is and if anyone thinks any other way, they are wrong.” “Red has to be English,” freshman Cordelia Lorenz said. Some students feel that English is blue, while others feel it is red. The most conflicting opinions are between English and math. “Social studies is blue for sure,” McLaughlin said.

No wait, science is green and social studies is yellow,” Mitchell said.įreshmen Rachel McLaughlin and Lindsey Yanacek differed from most other students in their opinions. Senior Bailey Mitchell changed his mind after initially contemplating this subject. When thinking about social studies, most students thought of yellow, with a few outliers matching them to other colors. A total tally from this reporter’s sources of science correlating to green is 10 out of 15. “Science is obviously green, I think we can all agree on that,” junior Amelia Haworth said.Ĭontrary to this popular belief, there are several outliers including sophomore Robert Trost who feels otherwise. For some students, this one is a no-brainer. “I feel this way because green is like a color of nature,” Kane said. “I just feel the chemical vibes.”įreshman Elizabeth Kane has a similar point of view about science being green. “Science has to be green,” senior Nevin Allen said. Most can agree that science correlates to the color green. Many times, students make these connections based on content learned in the classes, or the school supplies they had for the classes. “I think if you do it another way, it’s wrong,” Thompson said, “but I also won’t yell at you for it.” Sophomores Naomi Thompson, Zimri Ramos and Giovanah Heller each agree that math is red, English is blue, social studies is yellow and science is green. Some people have strong stances on what color a subject like math goes with. The particular argument of school subject colors has been stirring through the halls and circulating throughout social media. Many conversations that people have daily involve their opinions and can sometimes lead to arguments. When it comes to highly controversial topics, there is a plethora of opinions out there. Students associate these colors and classes in their minds without evidence, only intuition.

Through conversation, students have made their own sentiments on which colors match to certain school subjects. The subjects of math, English, social studies and science are up for debate. Colorful competition…Arguing over school subjects in correlation to colors, sophomores Ben Ekker (left) and Nathan Woodbury state their cases.
