Well what happens in most state laws here in the good old US of A we have a law system that requires all parents to send there children / teenagers to a public / private school for education until they are 16 which point the child can say they want to drop out but I wouldn't recommend that get fully educated until your eightteen and get your diploma.
Yes, the parents will be charged a heft fine if the child does not attend school. They will first be informed via mail, and may be summoned to court.
Yes.
Generally, the non-custodial parent should be informed of teacher conferences, parents' night and other school functions. They should be able to attend school functions as long as they maintain a congenial relationship with the custodial parent. The non-custodial parent does not have the right to take the child out of school, visit the child while at school, attend teacher conferences, choose the school, obtain the child's records or contact the school unless they have that right by a court order.Generally, the non-custodial parent should be informed of teacher conferences, parents' night and other school functions. They should be able to attend school functions as long as they maintain a congenial relationship with the custodial parent. The non-custodial parent does not have the right to take the child out of school, visit the child while at school, attend teacher conferences, choose the school, obtain the child's records or contact the school unless they have that right by a court order.Generally, the non-custodial parent should be informed of teacher conferences, parents' night and other school functions. They should be able to attend school functions as long as they maintain a congenial relationship with the custodial parent. The non-custodial parent does not have the right to take the child out of school, visit the child while at school, attend teacher conferences, choose the school, obtain the child's records or contact the school unless they have that right by a court order.Generally, the non-custodial parent should be informed of teacher conferences, parents' night and other school functions. They should be able to attend school functions as long as they maintain a congenial relationship with the custodial parent. The non-custodial parent does not have the right to take the child out of school, visit the child while at school, attend teacher conferences, choose the school, obtain the child's records or contact the school unless they have that right by a court order.
no a parent or guardian cannot get in trouble if a child decides to drop out. if he or she decides to drop out the state cant do anything about it.
If the parent can show that they are home schooling the child in some form or fashion then there is no punishment.
If a child over the age of 10 gets in trouble at school for drug usage, the school will call the parents and the police. The police generally wait for a child's parent or guardian is onsite to begin questioning.
That would depend on the circumstances. If there is not a legal, acceptable reason for the child not attending school, the non-custodial parent could file a motion for modification of the original custody order based on the same.
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.
In Nebraska, a child must attend school until they are 18 years of age. However, a parent can give permission for a child to dropout at the age of 16.
prism and a big fine its a big deal now that they made it a law
If a child does not want to attend Sunday School they should simply speak to their parents and explain the reason why. If the child does not have a valid reason, or even if they do, the parent still makes the final decision about their attendance.
That parent would be in violation of a court order, so yes, they would be in trouble. The adult makes the decisions, not the child. The child should be put into a car and driven home.