Juggling family and school is a challenge time wise. It can also be a burden financially, at least in the short-term. Adding work to the mix helps financially, but makes it harder to spend enough time on everything.
Many adult students find it worthwhile to get their degrees even with a family and a job, just because education helps them go where they want to, and earn more money. Whether it is worth it or not depends on individual circumstances and whether the short term sacrifice is worth the long term goal.
being a full time student
Yes, the status of the obligated parent is irrelevant.
If you have to file a claim on that child they can request that you 'prove' they are a full time student. I had to do this periodically without a claim while our daughter was in college. And if you cannot prove it that child will have no coverage.
If you are married, both parents have to work or one has to be a full time student. The amount that one can deduct for dependant care is limited to the lowest salary of each parent. If one parent doesn't work and isn't a student, the deduction would be 0 because the least salary would be 0. The amount that one can deduct if one parent is a student is based on the number of months that the person was in school.
In most countries a 20 year old is classed as an adult, whether in full time education or not. An adult is responsible for their own actions, so why would a parent not be able to 'emancipate' an adult child?
Probably right at the edge of the elligibility for coverage, even with the full time student part. The school though should have an option for you to get your own health care through them.
Yes, being granted full custody does not relieve the other parent of their financial obligations to the child(ren).
No. Employed person brings cash in; student doesn't. Check with your local law office tho.
as long as your child continues to be a full time student, then they are covered until they graduate. That may not be the case. Most insurance will cover a student to age 21 - 25. So if the student wants to pursue a doctorate that will take them past their cutoff date then they will be terminated. It depends on the policy.
They recently changed the laws of custody, No one parent has full custody UNLESS they see the other parent as unstable and unfit. If the parent you want to live with has been deemed unfit as a parent then it will have to be taken to court or you can contact certain child organizations to give you more details about how to leave your current home and return to the home of an "unfit parent" However if one parent obtained full custody of the child and the other parent was not deemed unfit as a parent, you may still live with them because of the recent change in custody laws, stating no one parent can have full or primary custody. (in other words, if your mom has full custody and your dad has none ((Also assuming the father hasn't been charged with being a drug addict, alcoholic, or financially unstable etc.)) you may live with the father)
The full form of IED student is "International Education Development."
a full time student is always doing schoolwork/homeworka part time student only does the work in school;-)