No. In fact, paying for your child's education is voluntary. The obligation to pay for college is more of a social "feel good" type of obligation, not a legal one. Therefore, if you feel that your child is not holding up their "part of the bargain" and not focusing on their studies then you may cut them off.
a
That depends on individual state laws.
Anybody can apply for student loans. You or your child should "google" scholarships and see if there are any that your child qualifies for. There are thousands of them out there. if you are divorced an the child is 18 or over you do not have to pay for college it would be up to you if you want to co-sign or pay for college
No, at 18 your child is legally an adult and is no longer your dependant, so you do not have to pay support.
That depends on what's in your child support order. In WI the court can't order child support during college, however, if the parent voluntarily agreed to pay it and it was placed in the child support order, then it will be enforced.
Yes he does.
... to pay child support? Yes, unless the child is adopted.
Depends on your state laws and what your child support agreement says but you have to pay at least until the child is 18.
Child support is based upon age (usually 18), not education.
If the child is under 1 then you do, if they are over 18 than you dont.
If you sign over your parental rights do you still have to pay childsupport
You still pay child support until the child is 18. Parental rights means you signed away having any legal say in the child not the fact that you are still the parent.