Every year in April, the NAEYC (National Association for the Education of Young Children) celebrates the "Week of the Young Child." Perhaps you could check out their website.
2007-07-21 08:54:19
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answer #1
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answered by SueZCute 2
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heres a thought, print a story and have every child in the school sign it like a petition, and make a statment that you want to make this a law that children has rights too, for example heres a true story , T.C. was in second grade, she did not know how to tie her shoe , she refused to clean her desk at the end of the day, When the teacher told her to stay after school, to clean her desk, The child couldnt call home to tell her parents where she was, Her parents were petrified when 5 pm, came along, and no T.C. came home, The father ran to the school, there was T.C. behind her desk crying and shaking up, The father yelled at screamed at the teacher, That T.C. had every right to call home, the teacher gloated shes just a child, That teacher ended up to be fired, Soo show this story and tell the kids to sign this petition, if T.C. should have a right to call home and to tell her parents whats going on, I bet you will get sooo many signatures , and also parents signatures as welll, if you get 1000 signatures from every school, You will pass the bill, For you see my name is T.C. And i wanted to make up a law and call it the T.C. law, Iam 43 years old now, but how well i remember, that teacher was so cruel and never let me have my say because i was quote un quote just a kid
2007-07-22 15:43:33
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answer #2
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answered by trudycaulfield 5
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I depends on how you define children's rights. The ACLU has a viewpoint that includes children having the right to divorce parents, NAMBLA has another viewpoint, and then there's Barak Obama's views on teaching kindergardners about sex.
It just depends on what you think their rights are in the first place.
2007-07-21 13:28:50
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answer #3
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answered by open4one 7
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