I was a (male) TA in primary schools for ten years, then two years in a TOUGH comprehensive. When I retired, I continued in schools on a voluntary basis, both secondary and primary at different times.
I always think, no matter how difficult or 'naughty' children are, they DON'T really want to be disliked by teachers or parents. But conflicts in their minds, in their ability to learn and do work in a satisfactory way, and an inability to cope with their emotions and the situations they find themselves in, prevent them from behaving in the way that adults want them to.
Just as toddlers go through the 'terrible twos' when they start to realize that they COULD influence people and their environment, but that adults PREVENT them from doing so, I think adolescents experience a similar, but more intense frustration with their life and current situation.
They might not express it in words, and may even feel embarrassed to find themselves behaving in the way they do, but without very sympathetic support and an understanding, loving relationship with someone - ideally two parents, but frequently not, so they may turn to a boyfriend/girlfriend - for comfort.
[Only today, in the News, their is concern about increasing numbers of school children 'self-harming'.]
So: - it would seem many of our young people are presently, not in a very happy place. They don't feel able to cope, with school, with exams, friendships, and adults; and all they get from people is sanctions, 'groundings' and other 'punishments', not the sympathy and understanding that they crave, and need, if they are to emerge undamaged at the end of their teenage years.
OP : If at all possible, I think you need to look back over the past five or eight years, and examine your relationship with DD: has she always been like this; if not, when did things change, and why? Are there things - subjects, activities, people - that she DOES enjoy, and participate in?
Conflict and fighting don't solve problems - on a family level, or on a global level. If we can't get on with our own children, what hope is there for the wider world?