School leaving age in Eurth
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School leaving age in Eurth, 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 | |||||
Cashar | 1968 | Education in Cashar is mandated to be sponsored by corporations from the ages of four to fourteen. After fourteen, citizens must compete for a sponsorship for continuing education up until the age of eighteen. Children are eligible to work upon achieving the ability to read. Generally speaking, most children usually only work part-time in order to get the most out of their education. It's not unheard of, though, especially for poorer children to work full-time. | ||||
Dolchland | A.I. 201.M1 (A.D. 201) | Those that volunteer for military service before their primary education is complete receive a more specialised education for the branch of their choosing. Education is only mandatory for boys. | ||||
Faramount | 2018 | Faramount ostensibly has liberal labor and education laws that include compulsory education to age 16 and prohibit employment before age 16. Yet these laws are scarcely enforced in reality, and child labor is widespread throughout the nation. | ||||
Mauridiviah | 2018 | Those who work below the age of 16 are still considered minors and have special protections. | ||||
Oyus | 1995 | The Oyusard National Congress in 1995 abolished a standard minimum age for employment, replacing it with an assortment of brackets and universal statutes that must be followed when employing someone below the age of 16 and/or while still attending government mandated school. The younger age brackets see some of the strictest regulations, which typically discourages employment altogether. The only exemptions that can be seen on this matter are small rural farming families. Younger children's wages are also often in a secured account that disallows a parent from accessing it unless valid reasoning is given. | ||||
Variota | 1943 | The Future of Our Motherland Act, established in 1943 by Foorste Heere fan'es Ferantwortelik fan'es Folke Wiktor Walensa, established a minimal age for children to remain in school and raised the employment age from 6 to 10 for part-time positions and 12 for full-time positions. Nowadays, it is extremely rare to find anyone that has quit school or is working a full-time position under the age of 16. The government has programs in place to stimulate additional courses and classes for those that have quit school early. |