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17 yr old stepdaughter dropped out of high school

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JacobJoel

Member
good. grief.

Did you HAVE to go and be so mature about it so quickly?

these people can be loads of fun when they get riled up and you spoiled it by correcting yourself.

i just hate that.

bummer for the drop out tho. here's to Dad sticking to the situation like flies on rice till she gets her premature all growed up attitude corrected. It is HELL finding a job w/out a college degree these days, much less a high school diploma.

you might google the stats on that concept.

For dad. obviously. the mo ammo the betta, ya know
 

Zigner

Senior Member, Non-Attorney
Did you HAVE to go and be so mature about it so quickly?

these people can be loads of fun when they get riled up and you spoiled it by correcting yourself.

i just hate that.

bummer for the drop out tho. here's to Dad sticking to the situation like flies on rice till she gets her premature all growed up attitude corrected. It is HELL finding a job w/out a college degree these days, much less a high school diploma.

you might google the stats on that concept.

For dad. obviously. the mo ammo the betta, ya know
Great addition to the thread.
 

JacobJoel

Member
why....thank you! i'm honored that you noticed. you are one of the board's heros!

totally serious about that drop out stuff. it will burn life's bridges before they get a chance to go anywhere.
 

Zigner

Senior Member, Non-Attorney
why....thank you! i'm honored that you noticed. you are one of the board's heros!

totally serious about that drop out stuff. it will burn life's bridges before they get a chance to go anywhere.
Yes, absolutely true.
Unfortunately, in Florida, it's perfectly legal for the child to drop out with the mom's permission.
I never said it was a good idea, but then again, this is a LEGAL forum.
 

Gracie3787

Senior Member
Florida state law allows the parent to give consent for a child, 16 years or older, to withdraw from school.
True. However, as Ginny pointed out, by doing so a parent is also setting the child up to lose thier DL. Florida is very strict about that, if a child under age 18 is not enrolled in school, they cannot have a DL.
 

TinkerBelleLuvr

Senior Member
I pointed out the DL angle because that was one of the items that mom possibly enticed the daughter with ... would be a shame to lose it over dropping out of school. I'm for using any carrot or stick that will work to keep a child in school. Dad may want to also see if there is an 'alternative' school available for the daughter. There are kids who just can't function well in a regular school day; this provides a safe way to still get the schooling that will allow her to graduate.
 

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