If the child is a legal citizen they go to the closest legal relative, if there is no one to take the child they go into foster care. If the child is not a legal citizen they will be deported with the parent. If the child is a legal citizen and they aren't registered in school they can be deported with the parent as well.
If the child is otherwise entitled to public benefits, they will still be entitled if a parent is deported. There is no added or forfeited benefits to a child of a deported parent.
What could happen if a parent don't send a child to school in n.j.
Yes, they can be terminated. Because if the parent is deported then the sysem will not take the child all the way where ever they are.
The child can go with the parents.
No a custodial parent can not kick a child out of school if the child is still a minor. If the child is 18 years old, the parent may kick them out.
When a child rapes the parent the child is charged according to the laws of that state.
Nothing extraordinary happens. You are just a child of a parent.
Depends if the parent has said that the child can choose what he wants, if the parent has then it is recommended that the child is given the choice of the school that they get to go to
The amount of hours with each parent, minus time at school. see link
No! Not ditching school is the child's judgment, and prosecuting the parent of the child has absolutely no effect on the child. If the child is going to skip school, the child should be punished.
The school calls social services to report child abuse not the parents. Specially if the child abuse is being done by the parent.
Schools don't teach values that is the parents job and it is the parents job to shape the child. Before a child ever reaches school the parent is the first teacher and what the child will become is set before they are 4 years old. Unfortunately many parents expect the school to be the parent, teacher, nurse, and counselor. This is an impossible task because without the parent the school can't do it all. The parent is the most important person (or should be) in a child's life and who or what the child grows up to be is the responsibility of the parent not the school.