Asked by carlos
11) Which right or responsibility do you think is most important for young people to understand, and why?
12) Why should citizens vote when they are old enough?
13) As a student, what is one right that you have at school, and why is it important?
14) What do you think should happen if someone uses speech to threaten or hurt others?
15) What is the difference between a right and a responsibility?
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11) Responsibility to respect others’ rights. Knowing your rights is important, but understanding you must respect other people’s rights (safety, privacy, expression, property) is crucial for getting along, learning, and keeping communities fair. It helps young people make choices that protect everyone’s opportunities.
12) Citizens should vote because it’s the main way to have a say in who makes laws and policies that affect daily life (education, taxes, safety, rights). Voting protects democracy: if people don’t vote, a small minority can decide things for everyone. It’s also a civic responsibility that helps hold leaders accountable.
13) One right I have at school is the right to a safe and respectful learning environment. It’s important because feeling safe and respected is necessary to concentrate, participate, ask questions, and learn. Without it, students can’t reach their academic or social potential.
14) Speech that threatens or intentionally harms others is not protected the same way as ordinary opinion. If someone uses speech to threaten or hurt others, there should be consequences: remove or restrict the harmful speech when necessary, hold the person accountable (discipline, school or workplace consequences, or legal action if it’s a criminal threat or incitement), and provide support to victims. At the same time, responses should follow fair procedures and aim to prevent future harm (education, mediation, counseling).
15) A right is something people are entitled to (protection, access, or freedom) — for example, the right to education or free expression. A responsibility is something people are expected or required to do — for example, obeying laws, respecting others, or voting. Rights give people protections; responsibilities help protect everyone’s rights.
12) Citizens should vote because it’s the main way to have a say in who makes laws and policies that affect daily life (education, taxes, safety, rights). Voting protects democracy: if people don’t vote, a small minority can decide things for everyone. It’s also a civic responsibility that helps hold leaders accountable.
13) One right I have at school is the right to a safe and respectful learning environment. It’s important because feeling safe and respected is necessary to concentrate, participate, ask questions, and learn. Without it, students can’t reach their academic or social potential.
14) Speech that threatens or intentionally harms others is not protected the same way as ordinary opinion. If someone uses speech to threaten or hurt others, there should be consequences: remove or restrict the harmful speech when necessary, hold the person accountable (discipline, school or workplace consequences, or legal action if it’s a criminal threat or incitement), and provide support to victims. At the same time, responses should follow fair procedures and aim to prevent future harm (education, mediation, counseling).
15) A right is something people are entitled to (protection, access, or freedom) — for example, the right to education or free expression. A responsibility is something people are expected or required to do — for example, obeying laws, respecting others, or voting. Rights give people protections; responsibilities help protect everyone’s rights.
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