Here in Canada, I have essentially full control over my child's academic life. I decide which school they can attend, in certain cases if I feel the teacher is not treating my child respectfully I can have my child moved to another classroom. Most importantly, I have access to the school administration and we have a good rapport. If I see a problem, all I need to do is contact the principal and we work together to solve it.
The involvement of parents in their child's academics can have a huge impact on the child's academic success. If the parents are involved and encourage their child to perform well and take an active interest in what they are learning and doing in class, the child will have a greater chance of academic success. A child's home life in general can also have an impact on their academic success, as stressors from home often carry over into the classroom.
ummm i think the parents, because they should be there at all times to help with anything. if the parents help with homework, or during summer vacation, help their child by teaching ahead, they can really succeed in life. that's what my parents did and i believe im academically successfull.
The right of parents is to follow what the court tells them to do. If your child is required to see each parent then so be it. Each parent has to sow some kind of parenting figure in their child's life. Also to comfort them when they are having a bad day. The maion right is the child shares coustity with the parents or one parent gets to have the child.
Parents affect the life of a child the most. The parents affect a child by the way they treat them, love them, and how they spend their time with them. Children look to their parents before anyone else.
Child support and visitation are separate issues and visitation rights are not dependent on paying child support. He has the right to petition the court for visitation and custody as well as the responsibility to pay child support. The courts encourage the involvement of both parents in the child's life. If the parents are not married the father may need to establish his paternity before petitioning for visitations or custody.
If you are an underage parent that lives with your parents they have a say in your life as it affects your child. They do not have a say over your child directly.
That depends on the circumstances of the custody modification. Was it permanent, temporary, was the child adopted, did the parent voluntarily relinquish parental rights or were they terminated by the court? No one here can possibly give you an answer without a lot of detailed information including your legal residence. You should really consult an attorney anyway. He or she would be able to provide an informed and detailed opinion on whether or not you have any rights and if so, what they are.
Without more information to go on, it's rather difficult to give much of an answer. If it's his child, and he wants to be in the child's life as an active father, and he is not abusive to the child, then you don't. You don't try to force him to give away his rights as the father, nor do you do that to your child. Children have a right to know, and be with, their biological parents unless the parents are abusive. Is it a case of two teens and an unwed pregnancy? If so, he still has his rights as the child's father. If you don't want to raise the child, then give him sole custody and sign away your rights. On the other hand, if he doesn't want the responsibility of raising the child himself, but is not willing to sign away his rights, then that's a different matter. But there is no way to force him to sign away his rights. If it's a case where you and the child's father are not together, and he is not involved in the child's life, and you have a husband who loves and wants to adopt your child, then, again, there is no way to force him to sign away his parental rights. In all of the above situations though, if you have custody of the child, you can have the courts force him to pay child support.
yes if the child accepts Jesus as the savior of his/her life.
To have a better life then there parents ...
The life insurance proceeds are owed to the beneficiary(s), regardless of parental rights.
I hope that they do have some kind of rights. My brother passed away, and I have tried to spend time iwth my neice, and all I get is the run around. It is heart breaking, as she is my only neice and I love her to pieces.