I meant to say "from the other parent" not "for the other parent"
In the US, a dependent child of a deceased parent may be eligible for assistance from Social Security. Check with your local Social Security office.
Check your local school district or you can use any of several online school to obtain your ged.
You apply through the Department of Social Services, have a home study, and get a background check.
If the school is your employer, and they are taking out Social Security taxes from your pay check then, yes they need your social security.
No, or very rarely at least. Social Security ends when you either turn 18, or when you graduate from High School. The age that children of a deceased parent stop receiving Social Security is age 18, after they graduate from High School. They can receive it until 19, if they haven't graduated high school and still attending. I called Social Security after I posted my first comment. When they turn 18, they can have their money direct deposit to their account if the child wants, or they choose to have a check sent to them direct, until they graduate at age 19,
CMS has a program called Parent Assistant, you can get the passcode for the child in quesiton from the office of the school where the child is attending
Social addict check
From what I could find at age 16 you can with parent consent. At age 17 you can sign yourself out, you don't need a parent signature. However it is best to check with your school district and ask for the exact laws.
My aunt died on the first of May and received her check on the 3rd, the lawyer told us it was okay to cash as social security checks are from the previous month. Which would have been from April and she died in May.
Emancipation laws vary from state to state, check with your local department of Social Services
Local yellow pages is certainly a good place to check for the schools that are offering the best social worker degree. You can also get to know the complete information of those school where this degree is available.
Homeschooling is legal in all 50 states. Check out the requirements at http://www.hslda.org/laws/default.asp