It's not required as state laws generally address this, and even extending into the college years, or further. see link
Currently, nothing specific. After all, the parent paying child support is still the child's parent and obligated to support her. Only five states specifically take it into consideration.
A person can try to talk to another about paying child support. However, until the person is in the United States, nothing can be done.
Paying child support depends solely on the terms of the legal agreement. If the agreement states that you will pay support until the child reaches a certain milestone, be it age or college graduation or economic emancipation or whatever, then you will pay child support until that moment. The alternative is to go back to court to try to get the agreement changed.
If on the same child you need to file a motion to clarifysee link
Yes, and continuing child support owed after in states like Missouri where death is not a justiable cause for not paying support.
In states like Kansas, in order to have the right to challenge a child being put up for adoption, soon after being born, the potential father must begin paying Child Support 18-Weeks into the Pregnancy. But, if the potential father begins paying, and later learns he's not the father of the child, he must continue paying in 20 states, and with limitations in those states that do allow men paying support to later challenge paternity.see links
Yes, you sure can.
Yes, within the limitations of the law in individual states that set child support to the point of graduation from high school. In many states, this limit is age 19.see link
Unless it is otherwise stipulated in a divorce final judgment, child support can be terminated when the child reaches the age of 18. In Florida, paying support generally stops at age 18. However, it depends on what your support order says. The age may be different for other states. You should read your support order carefully to understand when to stop paying support. If you've missed paying some of the support in past years, you may have to keep paying until you've paid off everything you missed. For more information take a look at: http://www.florida-court-forms.net/florida-child-support.html
In most states on her 18th birthday
Six months after graduation in those few states that require child support into the college years.
In the United States of America the high school graduation rate is 0.686%