Whether it's fair to be grounded for forgetting to get a paper signed for school depends on the context and the expectations set by parents or guardians. If the expectation was clearly communicated and the consequence was previously discussed, grounding might be seen as appropriate. However, if it was a one-time oversight without serious implications, a conversation about responsibility might be a more constructive response. Ultimately, fairness often hinges on understanding and communication between the parent and child.
There is a sign in button in the to right corner. if you have registered and need or forgot your password you can click forgot password an type in your email, you will then get an email with a link where you can type in a new password
If you're signed out of Answers - to the left of the screen is a sign-box. You should see a small link 'forgot password'. If you click that, it will ask you for your user-name OR email address. Assuming you can still remember the email address you signed up with - just type that in, and your log-in details will be mailed to you.
Contracts generally need two signatory parties.
If you signed a home-school agreement (HSA) at the beginning of the school year (which every school must have), you can let the HSA deal with your 18-year-old's behavior, according to AdviceGuide. If you have not signed an HSA, then do a Google search.
On the log-in page there is a shortcut you must click and a password will be sent to the email account you used when you signed up for service.
when the constitution was signed he forgot his glasses. that's why he wrote it so big
The Treaty of Paris was signed in Paris because France created the treaty and it was signed in Paris.
If the notary forgot to sign, the document is not notarized.
I am currently a Keller Graduate student and honestly I hate this school. The faculty are horrible and unhelpful. The classes are a rip off, the only reason why I signed up for this school is because they don't require the GMAT.
For a minor in the United States, most working forms have to be signed by someone designated by the school board for the school district the student attends. Usually the principle of the school handles these.
No she is not because, when she was little she was sent to a catholic school in new york.Where she had holy lessons as one of her classes that her parents signed her up for.Theirs your answer.
When you sign in, there should be an option underneath password.If you signed up with a fake email address, then more fool you...