Home & Garden14 mins ago
Our careers advisor is unmarried and pregnant
39 Answers
Our school is always teaching us that we should get married before we have children but our careers advisor who is also a supply teacher is unmarried and pregnant, she is in a relationship with the father but surely that goes against everything they teach us.
Answers
Why? It's clearly a case of 'do as we say, not as we do'.
12:59 Mon 22nd Aug 2011
This is something which - these days - is very much up to the individual's circumstances, and person beliefs.
If your careers advisor is in a stable relationship, just not married, that what lots of people do these days, many people live together for years (if not all their lives) without getting married.
The worry at the moment, and the message which the school is trying to get across to young people, is that babies shouldn't ideally be conceived to teenage parents by accident, or just because you feel like it, or because life would be better if you had a baby - having a long term relationship, married or not, is a much better basis for bringing up a child.
If your careers advisor is in a stable relationship, just not married, that what lots of people do these days, many people live together for years (if not all their lives) without getting married.
The worry at the moment, and the message which the school is trying to get across to young people, is that babies shouldn't ideally be conceived to teenage parents by accident, or just because you feel like it, or because life would be better if you had a baby - having a long term relationship, married or not, is a much better basis for bringing up a child.
There is a difference between <should> and 'must'.
It may be desirable for children to be born into a committed relationship bound by a legal contract (ie marriage) but hopefully the teacher in question will be an example that this is not essential - heaven knows there are plenty of examples where marriage has not provided a good environment for child rearing.
It may be desirable for children to be born into a committed relationship bound by a legal contract (ie marriage) but hopefully the teacher in question will be an example that this is not essential - heaven knows there are plenty of examples where marriage has not provided a good environment for child rearing.
Keeley, I think you may be posting this to try to make mischief for this teacher. I am sure your school teaches ethical behaviour - not just that their belief is that marriage is the ideal setting for children to be raised within. So if my guess is right, before you try getting at someone anonymously online thnk a bit more about you on ethical behaviournd aso remember that if it comes to litigation, your post can be traced back to you.
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