Yes. The legal age is 18.
That would depend on what state or school jurisdiction you lived within. Your best bet would be to call and ask the school itself. Some schools also make exceptions for special circumstances.
Yes, at 18 years old she is legally considered an adult and can make her own decisions for which she is then responsible for.
No it is not. Having a child does not make one an adult, it just makes you a parent. You are still the responsibility of your parents.
In the state of CA we do have a cap. A charter school is still attached/works through a district so it would come under the cap. We can only make 31,000 a year in teaching after retirement.
the people that make school polices are the school boards or the school district of the state they make sure kids learn and stay safe.
Yes, but you still need to go to law school. Being a paralegal doesn't make someone eligible to take the bar exam of a state.
No. The school does not set the time or ending of the school day and has no control over it. The times are set by the state and the state audits the school down to the second to make sure they comply with the state mandate. If a school started later they would have to go later in the day to make up the time.
Yes
NO!
Generally, the obligation ends when the child reaches 18 years of age. If the child is already otherwise emancipated, payments will stop at the time of emancipation. If the child is still in primary or secondary school when he or she reaches the age of 18, support payments will continue until that child graduates, ceases to attend school on a regular basis, fails to make satisfactory academic progress towards graduation or reaches the age of 20 - whichever of these comes first. Based on its discretion, the court may order payments to cease at age 18, regardless of graduation date or any other factors.
No good reason. The school does not set the time or ending of the school day and has no control over it. The times are set by the state and the state audits the school down to the second to make sure they comply with the state mandate. If a school started later they would have to go later in the day to make up the time.
According to the U.S. Department of Education, when a school closes "the generally accepted practice is for the school to make arrangements with the state-licensing agency to store their records." While there is no guarantee that the school did this, it is worth checking with the U.S. Dept. of Education. For contact information for your state, visit the Related Link.If the school that closed is a public school, you can also contact the main office of the school district that the school was in. There is a good chance that they will have the records of the closed school.If the closed school was affiliated with a religious organization, you can contact someone within that organization to help you find out where the records were sent when the school was closed. If the organization has another school that is still open, that would be a good place to start. If the school was affiliated with a particular church, that church might still have the school's records.