Author Topic: Children Chained to Beds; the Dark Side, Perhaps, of Home Schooling?  (Read 148 times)

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Offline SirJohn

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But how?  How can you make people at least once in a while bring their kids out into the public sphere so that the rest of the world can see that the kids are doing well?

Well, in France, pren-natal and post-natal medical visits are mandatory. And it's also mandatory for children to be given regular assessments by health professionals. If you don't bring your kid in they'll come visiting.

Children under the age of six are evaluated by team of pediatricians, nurses, psychologists, and social workers in the Centres deProtection Maternelle et Infantile.[23] A decree provides for a number of mandatory medical visits: nine during the first year, one of them to take place within eight days of birth, one during the ninth or tenth month, three between the thirteenth month and the twenty-fifth month, and finally two for each of the next four years.[24]  When parents fail to bring their children in for regular checkups, social workers are dispatched to the family home.  After the age of six, children’s health is monitored by school health services.  Mandatory physical and psychological checkups take place when the children are ages six, nine, twelve, and fifteen.[25]  In addition to monitoring children’s health, schools also have the responsibility to educate children on health issues including, for example, nutrition, sexual education, and addictions (drugs, alcohol, & tobac

https://www.loc.gov/law/help/child-rights/france.php
« Last Edit: January 21, 2018, 11:43:44 am by SirJohn »
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