Sentences with phrase «authority of parents»

Some Separation Agreements also contain language about the use and authority of parenting coordinators.
Joint custody refers to the joint legal authority of both parents to equally participate in decision - making; it has no relevance to the amount of time a child spends with each parent.
You don't have to try to take on the coercive authority of a parent, the persuasive authority (i.e. being knowledgeable about what you are teaching) is more than enough and all that you can conceivably be right in claiming.
Christine Quinn is attempting to circumvent the parental decision making authority of every parent in New York City that sends their children to public schools.
The first, in 2012, related to what was presented as «children's rights,» but was really a burglary of the authority of parents.
Yet even as Moon interrupts normal family relations and appropriates the authority of parents, church literature refers to family values, clearly referring not to the church family but to the traditional nuclear family.
And it is plain that the authority of parents must yield to this service... Christ... himself is my immediate bishop, abbot, prior, lord, father, teacher... I hope that he has taken from you one son in order that he may begin to help the sons of many others through me.»
Gov. George Deukmejian of California has vetoed a proposed measure linking driver's licenses to school attendance, contending that it would usurp the authority of parents.
On the eve of a potentially catastrophic Board of Education vote to turnaround ten more Chicago schools, the school reform research group Designs for Change has released a report showing that school turnarounds are not worth the extra expense, and that the unheralded reforms brought about under the authority of parent - led, democratically - elected local school councils have been far more effective.
A teacher of children and more general the school is in loco parentis while the children are at school, which means that the school has the authority of a parent over a children in the parent's absence.
A parent who disagrees with a determination made by a Parenting Coordinator may apply to the court, pursuant to s. 19 of the Family Law Act, to change or set aside any decision that he or she feels was beyond the authority of the Parenting Coordinator or based on an error of law or mixed fact and law.
It is critical that all voices be heard, including children who do not have the authority of a parent, but whose voice, feelings and behaviors are always some kind of barometer about what is going on in the family.
Legal custody refers to the authority of a parent to make major decisions regarding the child, such as religious affiliation and school choice.
This article explains the background of parenting coordination; how the authority of the parenting coordinator originates; the role of the parenting coordinator after orders (both interim and final) have been made; its effectiveness; and some of the key issues to consider and why — in addition to helping families make decisions — it presents an opportunity for families to learn skills that will help them help themselves in the long run.
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