School leaving age in Esquarium: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m (1 revision imported) |
|||
Line 46: | Line 46: | ||
|Despite both ages being synchronized, in many areas, students who have a certificate who are 14 can obtain a work permit and work specific jobs, and in addition, many hazardous jobs can only be served if you are over 18, and jobs involving serving alcoholic products can only be served if one is 21 or older. The school leaving age was raised gradually since 1871, with the leaving age in 1871 being in Grade 4, then in 1897 being raised to Grade 8, before 16 years of age was adopted as the standard in the 1920s and 1930s. | |Despite both ages being synchronized, in many areas, students who have a certificate who are 14 can obtain a work permit and work specific jobs, and in addition, many hazardous jobs can only be served if you are over 18, and jobs involving serving alcoholic products can only be served if one is 21 or older. The school leaving age was raised gradually since 1871, with the leaving age in 1871 being in Grade 4, then in 1897 being raised to Grade 8, before 16 years of age was adopted as the standard in the 1920s and 1930s. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|bgcolor="# | |bgcolor="#3F9BBB"| | ||
|{{flag|Montecara}} | |{{flag|Montecara}} | ||
| | |colspan=2|<center>16</center> | ||
|<center>16</center> | |<center>0</center> | ||
|<center> | |1937 | ||
| | |Students entering technical schools typically graduate at age 17, while university-bound students remain in secondary school until age 19. Working hours are limited for students. "Dangerous work" is prohibited for those under age 18. | ||
|Students | |||
|- | |- | ||
|bgcolor="#CC7862"| | |bgcolor="#CC7862"| |
Revision as of 18:02, 8 April 2019
School leaving age in Esquarium, as well as employment age, can vary across countries and territories.
Legend
Color legend | Ages legend |
School leaving age higher |
0 denotes education is not compulsory. (n) denotes part-time employment available from age n |
Employment age higher |
0 denotes no minimum employment age as children could be, in theory, employed from birth |
Both ages synchronized |
― denotes no information available |
Age[s] vary by province |
? denotes the age set is unknown |
No information / No age set |
Leaving age by country
# | Country | De jure | Education/ Employment gap |
As of | Details | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
School leaving age | Employment age | |||||
Katranjiev | 1975 | Katranjiev's school leaving age and employment age have been set at 16 since 1984: prior to this, from 1945 to 1975, the school leaving age was at 12 years, while the employment age was at 16 years, with the gap supposed to be filled by Liberationist activities, and beforehand, it was 16 for school leaving age. | ||||
Luziyca | 1931 | Despite both ages being synchronized, in many areas, students who have a certificate who are 14 can obtain a work permit and work specific jobs, and in addition, many hazardous jobs can only be served if you are over 18, and jobs involving serving alcoholic products can only be served if one is 21 or older. The school leaving age was raised gradually since 1871, with the leaving age in 1871 being in Grade 4, then in 1897 being raised to Grade 8, before 16 years of age was adopted as the standard in the 1920s and 1930s. | ||||
Montecara | 1937 | Students entering technical schools typically graduate at age 17, while university-bound students remain in secondary school until age 19. Working hours are limited for students. "Dangerous work" is prohibited for those under age 18. | ||||
Xiaodong | 1986 | Up until the age of 18, children can only participate in part-time work after they turn 15. Students may be automatically assigned part-time work if they attend standardised or technical secondary schools (this does apply for specialist schools). |