Parental obligations in compulsory education law
First of all, in the relationship between parents and school-age children or other wards, parents have the obligation to raise and educate underage children or other wards, and have the obligation to act as agents for underage children or other wards beyond their ability, part of which is the obligation to supervise underage children or other wards to receive compulsory education; At the same time, based on parental authority and agency, parents have the right to manage, educate and punish minor children or other wards, and even choose the educational content and form they think appropriate to a certain extent. Secondly, in the relationship between parents and the government, parents have the minimum obligation not to refuse, prevent or even take the initiative to monitor school-age children or other wards to receive compulsory education on the premise that the government provides sufficient conditions or the economic capacity allows. If parents violate this minimum obligation, the government can take all necessary and reasonable measures to ensure the implementation of compulsory education; At the same time, as the legal representative of minor children or other wards, they have the right to request the government to fulfill the obligation of running schools and ensure the implementation of compulsory education for minor children or other wards. Thirdly, in the relationship between parents and the school, parents have the obligation to cooperate with the school to do a good job in the education of school-age children or other ward; At the same time, based on its legal representative, the school can be required to ensure that its children or other guardians enjoy a series of rights equal to other students, such as the right to enter school, the right to use educational conditions, the right to obtain educational funding, the right to obtain fair evaluation, and the right to obtain academic certificates. And when the school violates the above rights, he can exercise the right to ask for relief on behalf of the children or other guardians.