Considering homeschooling? The veteran homeschoolers at TheHomeSchoolMom have decades of homeschooling experience and have encouraging answers to your homeschool questions below.
Once thought of only as a mom sitting at the kitchen table teaching, homeschooling is now recognized for what it is—families taking charge of their children's education through learning at home, joining co-ops, hiring tutors, participating in academic clubs, taking community college classes, and much more. Homeschooling is parent-directed and/or child-directed education that allows for the most personalized education plan.
Browse through our Homeschooling FAQ below, and use the main navigation bar or site search to view our large collection of homeschooling resources and answers.
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What Is Homeschooling?
Homeschooling is when children's education is based at home with their parents' guidance rather than through enrollment in a public school or private school. That said, the insider joke is that homeschooling isn't much like school, and we're never home.
That's because many homeschoolers find emulating classroom approaches to education is not as effective as the home-grown version, and in many places, there are lots of opportunities for homeschooled kids to learn with friends and out in the community.
Homeschooling can begin with kindergarten and go through homeschooling high school. As formal preschool has become more popular, more parents who do not send their kids to preschool also refer to homeschooling in preschool or pre-K.
How Many Homeschoolers Are There in the U.S.?
Homeschooling in the U.S. has grown considerably. In 1999, only about 1.7% of students aged 5-17 were homeschooled; by 2012, that number had doubled to 3.4%. [Source]
The disruption to public schools caused by school closings, virtual learning, mask mandates, and more led to record-breaking numbers of families choosing to homeschool at the beginning of the 2020-2021 academic year. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, “By fall, 11.1% of households with school-age children reported homeschooling.” [Source]
What Are the Pros and Cons of Homeschooling?
Homeschooling is widely known for its flexibility, allowing parents to help children learn in the ways that work for each child. Parents and kids do not need to follow the conventions of school when they're homeschooling; they can customize, choosing their own curriculum or approach. Homeschooled kids are widely accepted at colleges and in the workplace.
You can read about the wide range of benefits of homeschooling, from building positive family relationships to homeschooling through illnesses and challenges.
Families do need to consider that homeschooling may affect situations like playing high school sports in some states and college admissions in others. In Virginia, the VHSL prohibits homeschooled students from participating in high school athletic programs.
New York's "preliminary education requirements," which do not prevent homeschoolers from graduating from high school or enrolling in college, are required in some form before a student can graduate from college. Since at least one of the options must be completed while the student is still of compulsory school age, it is imperative that homeschoolers know the education laws of their state and of any state where they may wish to attend college.
Homeschooled graduates can be admitted to college, join the military, get good jobs, start businesses, and live creative lives.
How Do I Get Started Homeschooling?
Typically, the steps to begin homeschooling include:
- Knowing and complying with your state’s legal requirements
- Locating local homeschoolers & getting connected
- Exploring homeschooling methods
- Finding your learning resources
- Attending a homeschool conference
- Incorporating your support network
To start homeschooling, read more about our Six Steps to Get Started Homeschooling, or jump in with our Quickstart Guide to Homeschooling.
What Are the Requirements for Homeschooling?
Homeschooling is legal and accepted in all fifty states in the United States and in many countries around the world. In the United States, homeschooling is regulated by the state, so homeschool laws are unique to each state.
Some states have no requirements; others might have requirements such as:
- Keeping attendance to show compliance with compulsory attendance law
- Notification/letter of intent to homeschool to the school district or superintendent
- Achievement tests or evaluations
- Naming your homeschool
Find more information about your state homeschool law through your state’s homeschooling organization.
What about Grade Levels in Homeschooling?
Grade levels were developed for schools, where numbers of students have to be moved through years of curriculum. While school is standards-based and grade-level-based, homeschooling can be potential-based.
Homeschooling allows parents to optimize the resources based on the child’s potential and aptitude, rather than on grade placement. It offers students the ability to step out of an environment focused on “appropriate grade placement” and into an environment where institutional goals give way to engaged learning at the right level of challenge.
It is not unusual for a homeschool student to work at different grade levels in different subjects. Students are able to excel where they are ahead and work at a relaxed pace where they need to spend more time on a subject.
You can read more about grade levels in “Homeschooling and Grade Levels (Or … Relax)”, as well as about "When Grade Level Matters."
What Is Deschooling?
A surprising factor in the adjustment to learning at home is the idea of deschooling. Both parents and children need to transition to learning outside of the school classroom that is the predominant method of education today.
Experienced homeschoolers recommend a period of deschooling before homeschooling, and they suggest that families continue over time to get "school defaults" out of their heads so that learning outside of school will flourish.
What about Planning or Choosing Curriculum for Homeschooling?
Parents can choose their homeschool curriculum, taking into account their overall approach to learning, their children's strengths, the amount of one-on-one time they can provide, their children's age and stage of development, and what their child enjoys doing. Some homeschoolers use a curriculum similar to what is found in schools, but many do not. Parents are free to choose the curriculum resources that best meet the needs of their family.
Homeschoolers have the freedom to do what works. They don't need to follow the education laws for public schools, and in the U.S., they don't need to follow any one specific approved or accredited curriculum.
Some states and countries have more regulations than others regarding what parents have to do to meet the home education law; however, in general, one of the benefits of homeschooling is that parents have the freedom to customize how their children learn. This includes freedom to choose their approach and the resources that will be used.
Homeschooling families can typically learn on any schedule that works for them.
What about Online Schools and Hybrid Homeschool Programs?
In some states, there are various "hybrid homeschool" options due to families combining some elements of homeschooling with classes and programs offered by public schools, private schools, charter schools, colleges, and online schools.
Some hybrid models are illegal in one state while legal in a neighboring state. Not all hybrid models of education are considered homeschooling by all homeschoolers, even if the education is mostly taking place within the home. That hasn't stopped some from calling these newer combo-types of education hybrid homeschooling instead of hybrid education.
Parents should understand whether the resources they choose—particularly online or virtual schools— are independent or put them under the purview of the local public school district. Virtual schools might be not clearly be labeled as virtual public schools or public charter schools.
Can Someone Else Homeschool My Child?
What if you want your kids to be homeschooled, but you can't or don't want to be the person who is personally homeschooling them? Laws vary on this depending on where you live, which parents should consider, but many homeschooling parents outsource parts of their kids' homeschooling, since the kids take classes, participate in co-ops, and work with tutors and mentors. If you're looking for someone to provide part or all of your children's home education, read Can Somebody Homeschool My Kids?
What about High School?
How Do You Get a Homeschool Diploma?
The short answer is that you print one. The longer answer is that high school diplomas are simply certificates for a wall, while transcripts are the official documentation of high school grades and courses.
Homeschool transcripts are an accepted form of documentation showing that the student graduated, and anyone wanting proof of graduation will ask the graduate for a copy of their transcripts.
For more information about homeschooling high school and how to create transcripts (plus a free transcript template), read “Homeschool Transcripts Explained.”
Do Homeschoolers Have to Take the GED Exam?
Although there are rare occasions when a homeschooler might need or want to take the GED exam, most often homeschool transcripts are a better and accepted choice. Four-year, junior, and community colleges all accept homeschool transcripts as proof of courses taken.
Nevertheless, homeschoolers should plan ahead as they enter high school. Researching the requirements of colleges, trade schools, unions, the military, or any other post-high school path that might interest them is necessary to ensure compliance with requirements.
This is particularly true when the student’s future path might include college sports, trade schools, or other less common paths where additional testing or specific programs might be required.
How Do I Choose a Homeschooling Schedule?
Some families have weekly schedules that look like school schedules, but most homeschooling families use the flexibility of homeschooling to create a weekly schedule that is customized for them. For a look at some of the effective homeschool schedules that Jeanne Faulconer has seen in her work as a homeschool evaluator, read “Homeschool Schedules: Arranging a Strong Homeschool Week.”
Why Do People Homeschool?
The main reasons people homeschool are concerns about the environment in schools and dissatisfaction with academic instruction. This is contrary to the stereotype, which assumes that most people who choose homeschooling do so for religious reasons.
NCES has collected data on why people are homeschooling. According to their 2016 education report,
When asked to select the reasons parents decided to homeschool their child, the highest percentage of homeschooled students had parents who said that a concern about the environment of other schools, such as safety, drugs, or negative peer pressure was one reason to homeschool (80 percent). The highest percentage of students’ parents reported that among all reasons, a concern about the environment of other schools was the most important reason for homeschooling (34 percent). Seventeen percent of homeschooled students had parents who reported dissatisfaction with academic instruction at other schools as the most important reason for homeschooling, while 16 percent reported a desire to provide religious instruction as the most important reason for homeschooling.
[Source]
What Are Homeschooling Styles?
There are many ways to homeschool, with the different approaches referred to as homeschooling styles or homeschooling methods. Different styles work for different families because their situations and their children are different.
One family may love an approach that doesn’t work at all for another family. People often start out with one approach and evolve to a different approach, or they combine aspects of several different styles and call themselves eclectic homeschoolers.
A word of warning: it's not unusual for new homeschool parents to try to replicate school at home when first homeschooling; they often switch approaches when they encounter resistance.
Grandparent Guide: Supporting Homeschooling
Our Grandparent Guide to Homeschooling gives grandparents concrete ideas for how to help without interfering and suggestions for how they can further build their relationships with their homeschooled grandchildren. Others in a homeschooling family's support network might also find the Grandparent Guide helpful if they are participating in a material way.
More Homeschooling FAQs
Didn’t find the information you were looking for here? Visit our Frequently Asked Questions page for answers to other questions you might have about homeschooling.
Sources
NCES, “Homeschooling in the United States: 2012“ (https://nces.ed.gov/pubs2016/2016096rev.pdf : accessed 30 September 2021)
U.S. Census Bureau, “Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey Shows Significant Increase in Homeschooling Rates in Fall 2020 (https://www.census.gov/library/stories/2021/03/homeschooling-on-the-rise-during-covid-19-pandemic.html : accessed 30 September 2021)
NCES, "Parent and Family Involvement in Education: Results from the National Household Education Surveys Program of 2016,” pg. 4 (https://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2017102 : accessed 30 September 2021)
Hello.
We are in a bit of an usual situation (at least it seems like one to us). We currently live in Delaware. Last year (2020-2021) we homeschooled our daughter for the entire fifth grade. She is now in sixth grade at our local middle school (2021-2022).
She did very well as a home schooler and is doing really well in the middle school.
By end of March 2022, we plan to leave Delaware and return to Los Angeles (where we lived about 10 years ago) to be close to family once again.
We would, therefore, like to have her finish out sixth grade as a home schooler (rather than dropping her into LAUSD during the final months of the school year).
Do you have any information about what the process would be so that our daughter can complete sixth grade via home school and be ready for in-school learning in the seventh grade (i.e., we want to make sure she is legally promoted from sixth to seventh). Would she be promoted in California since we'll be living there? Or would she be promoted in DE? Or some kind of hybrid? We really have no idea and I have not been able to get a straight answer from our school.
Thank you!
David
Hi David,
It's wise of you to consider these questions ahead of time so you can plan accordingly. Since your daughter is not in high school, the transition should be fairly straightforward. While we cannot advise on specific school district policies or state homeschooling statutes, typically the process would be to follow the notification policy for homeschooling in your new location when you arrive in March. Where I homeschooled in Virginia, that means sending a notification of intent to homeschool to the county school administrator within a reasonable amount of time after arriving. You will need to determine what that notification policy is for your new location; state homeschool organizations are a good place to go for this information.
Since the grade transition happens between the academic school years, the move from one grade to another would happen in your new location. In the fall, you would register your daughter with the appropriate school district as a public school student the same way any new student in that district would register for public school. As we note in our post "When Your Child Goes from Homeschooling to Public School," school is in charge of school, so the school decides what grade the child will enter when returning to public school. This is not usually a problem if the student has not fallen behind, but be aware that the school administration may ask for documentation of work performed, test scores, or other proof of progress.
We suggest that homeschoolers also notify the administrator of the old school district of your move so that they are not expecting to receive any further communication from you. While not usually required, this helps them close the file on the student and prevents future issues if you were to ever return to that school district.
I was doing some research on homeschooling and I'm glad this page was the first one I came across. It has literally everything I needed to know
I'm glad you found it helpful!