Phalynx wrote:Over her its is compulsory to attend school and it is the parents responnsibility untill the age of 16 to get them there. Truancy (absence from school) is perceived as such a problem that a number of parents have served time in prison for their teenagers failure to go to school - it works too!
No it doesn't.
Locking parents up for allowing their children to truant is just pointless.
There are clearly some issues within the family, if the parents aren't able or unwilling to ensure regular attendance. Locking the parents up isn't going to solve those issues.
Fining them isn't going to solve it either.
And, anyway, at the end of the day, it is the child's choice.
Regardless of what their parents do or don't do, the child clearly doesn;t want to go to school - that's the bigger problem.
The focus should be on finding out why the kid doesn't want to go to school, why they are truanting - and solving that.
Note, I'm not picking on you Phal, just, your statements remind me of things...
Phalynx wrote:I think a lot of the laws in this world are unjust, petty or plain daft but without them there is no social cohesion.
This reminds me of one of my favourite quotes, although I can't remember the authour now...
"School is all about making children conform to rules which make no sense. In preparation for a life full of rules which make no sense".
Social cohesion is quite possible without needless regulations.
Kids have so few boundaries nowadays as it is, parents and schools should at least be trying to cooperate on these things..
So
few boundaries?
Really?
What, so there were more boundaries before schooling was compulsory?
There were more boundaries when children were sent to work?
There were more boundaries when children were allowed to play without adult supervision, on streets and elsewhere?
Childhood is under so much restriction, surveillance, endless scrutiny and criticsm - never before has there been so much attempt to control and boundary children and childhood.
Whoever you vote for.
The government wins.