Since gravity acts downwards and an object is falling downwards its acceleration is 9.8ms-2? Why do some people say its -9.8ms-2 because its going down?
Like I am thinking since the gravity acts down and the object complements that direction (goes down) it means its positive and if it goes up (counter acting gravity) its -9.8ms-2?
The negative represents the direction in which it acts. The direction is towards the centre of the Earth, but since in high school physics you are working on problems that allows for the Earth to be approximated to a flat surface, you can solve your problem by drawing a Cartesian coordinate system. Since the gravity force points down it would be normal to say it's negative, because it's downwards.
This negative should not confuse you, it does not mean gravity will always go against motion, bit if say I throw a ball up in the air it has positive velocity which is slowed down by it's downwards acceleration (by g) to the point it will stop and start gaining negative velocity, since, it's accelerating downwards (by g).
Hope this helps.