Do you worry about homeschooling high school? Do you worry you’ll be able to teach it adequately, or that your child will have college options available to them? I’ve spent a lot of time writing about topics around homeschooling high school, with a focus on credit by exam – earning college credit outside of the college classroom, at a fraction of the price.
Continuing your homeschool through high school carries some extra weight, but with the right resources and time management, it can be done. Your student can thrive in the college classroom after their time with you at home!
Homeschooling high school basics
4 Things You Should Know About Standardized Testing
Pros and Cons of Virtual School
Homeschool Upper Grades on a Budget
How We are Tackling Homeschool High School Science
50+ Tasks to Prep Teenagers for Adulthood
40+ More Tasks to Prep Teenagers for Adulthood
Teen Privacy Online (Infographic)
High school organization
Homeschool Planet – The online planner that converted this pen-and-paper family
How We Organize Completed Work (High School)
Teaching Time Management for Teens
How We Keep Our Sanity Homeschooling High School
For moms
The “Talk” eBook – FREE for Subscribers
Passing the Torch – Reflections of a Homeschool Mom
10 Things I’m Thankful for in Homeschooling My Teen
10 Pieces of Advice for Your Beginning College Student
How Our High School Goals Have Changed – And Why That’s Okay
Homeschooling High School, Imperfectly
Credit by Exam (CLEP, DSST, AP)
Is My Child Ready for Credit by Exam?
How to Start with Credit by Exam
College Credit, Frugal Curriculum, Virtual School: Why it All Matters
5 Quick Tips for CLEP, DSST, and AP Exams
6 Credit by Exam Mistakes to Avoid
The Do’s and Dont’s of CBE Test Prep for Homeschoolers
Online CLEP Prep with Jumpcourse
DSST World Religions Lesson Plan
Use Praxis for a Gap Year: an Alternative to Continuing College
High school resources
The “Talk” eBook – FREE for Subscribers
Why We Use the Public School as a Homeschool Resource
Online CLEP Prep with Jumpcourse
[…] you head closer to homeschooling high school, curriculum naturally heads more traditionally, so it’s easier to see measured performance […]