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Family rights and obligations. Obligations of parents to their children






 

Obligations of Parents to Their Children. Parents are obliged to …………. (1) their children. The failure to meet any of these ………….. (2) may result in various kinds of ………. (3) and civil liability for the ……….. (4). The obligation to ……… (5) child support may be …………. (6) through any of various ………. (7) actions. An action may be ……….. (8) by the mother of an ……….. (9) child to force the father to provide ………… (10). Other actions may be ………….. (11) in connection with divorce, dissolution of ………… (12), annulment, or spousal support ………. (13), or brought by a …………… (14) agency.

Obligations of Children to Their Parents. Children are …………. (15) to support their parents under certain ………. (16). When a parent has insufficient……… (17) resources for his or her own ………… (18) and is unable to………… (19) his or her support because of sickness or ………… (20) age, an adult child must provide ………… (21) support to the parent.

Reading A: JAIL FOR PARENTS OF ABSENT STUDENTS?

Read the passage about students who do not follow rules.

 

" Cutting school" is a common practice for many students. Rather than going to school, students go to the mall, the beach, or a nearby friend's house. Some students cut class a lot, and teachers and admin­istrators are worried. In particular, teachers are worried because when students get low grades, teachers are often blamed. However, teachers are saying that the responsibility of coming to class belongs to the stu­dent. Teachers are saying that they are not responsible for the poor grades that these students are getting. There are disagreements as to where the responsibility for poor attendance lies. Some parents believe that it is the responsibility of the school to make sure that students attend school every day. At the same time, some teachers feel it is the parents' responsibility to make sure that the children attend school. However, parents say that they do not have the power to force their high-school-age children to go to school. Parents say that their children leave the house for school but just go somewhere else instead.

The state of Illinois has enacted a law that offers a controversial solu­tion to this problem.

 

Think of three possible answers for this question: What solution did the state of Illinois offer? Write your three answers on the lines below. Circle the number of your best answer. Be prepared to explain why you think your answer is a good solution to the problem of class absences:

1.____________________________________________________________________

2.____________________________________________________________________

3.____________________________________________________________________

 

Ex.

Work in small groups. Take turns presenting your three ideas, Tell which one you think is your best answer. Then each group should choose its best answer (or two) from the previous exercise and tell it to the class. Be ready to give reasons to support your answer. Which answer do most people think is the best one? Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each suggestion.

 

Reading B: THE MOTHER OF ABSENT STUDENT PUT IN JAIL.

Read this story about a student and her parent in Florida.

 

In 1999, Kimberly Barbey of St. Petersburg, Florida, was put in jail because her third-grade daughter, age nine, missed 161 days (of 180) in the 1998-99 school year and missed 9 days of the first 19 school days of the 1999-2000 school year.

A county judge, Patrick Cadell, decided to put Barbey in jail because Barbey's daughter had too many absences. The judge believed that the number of absences was an abuse of the system. It was a violation of Florida law.

The school principal, Terry Krasner, said, " The intent was never to see a mother in jail." The school tried to help Barbey and her child. The school sent a guidance counselor, a social worker, and a nurse to the home several times.

Ron Stone, a spokesperson for the school district, said, " Most par­ents, once you talk about legal action, they get the child in school". Barbey received warnings about this matter in court several times.

Some people in the area were shocked that a parent was sent to jail for something that the child did, but two years earlier, there was a sim­ilar case. Near Tampa, Florida, a mother was put in jail for two months for letting her daughter miss 315 days of school between 1995 and 1998.

 

Ex. What do you think of this Florida case? Do you agree or disagree with the judge’s decisions to put the mother in jail? Why?

 

Work in small groups. Discuss your opinion of the Florida judge’s decision in the Barbey case. Is this case similar to or different from the problem that the Illinois law was designed to solve?

 

Speaking 3: YOUR CHILDHOOD.

Answer these questions about how your parents treated you in terms of responsibility.

1. Were your parents strict with you?

2. If you made a mistake or misbehaved, what did your parents do? Give specific examples.

3. Did they give you specific responsibilities when you were a child? If so, give examples.

4. Compared to your brothers or sisters, did your parents give you more or less responsibility?

5. Why do you think this is true?

When you compare it to the situations of other people in your culture, do you think your situation with your parents and responsibility was usual? If not, what was different?

 

Work in pairs or small groups. Discuss your answers about responsibility when you were a child.

 

Exercise. Read the key word or phrase (in bold) in the left column. Circle the letter of the choice that is related to the key word or phrase.

 

  occasional a often b always c sometimes
  strict a rules b classes c lines
  attend a stay away from b go to c look at
  misbehave a behave badly b behave politely c want to see
  practice a repeated effort b natural ability c knowledge
  rather than a in addition to b because of c instead of
  administration a employees b management c teachers
  cut class a not do well b not understand c not attend
  blame a " You did it! " b " I love you! " c " He is great! "
  make sure a be angry b be certain c be patient
  too many a a few b some c too big a number
  shocked a believed b warned c surprised
  this matter a situation b people c transportation
  daughter a son b sun c some
  earlier a after b now c before

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