Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It almost seems like you would have researched this before homeschooling your child. Why risk limiting (or not) any future education chances without fully understanding what you are doing?
Welllllll....that's why I'm asking. To get information BEFORE making a decision. Thanks for your post anyway, Karen![]()
Just homeschool for college as well…why stop at high school.
Anonymous wrote:I know a homeschooler, who was accepted at colleges, where a "traditional" student was rejected. I wouldn't worry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It almost seems like you would have researched this before homeschooling your child. Why risk limiting (or not) any future education chances without fully understanding what you are doing?
Welllllll....that's why I'm asking. To get information BEFORE making a decision. Thanks for your post anyway, Karen![]()
Anonymous wrote:According to ACT.org, “Mean ACT Composite scores for homeschooled students were consistently higher than those for public school students.”
I imagine they do just fine getting into college.
Anonymous wrote:Just trying to get some feed back on college acceptances for folks who homeschool. Do ALL college accept diplomas from online schools? Can a home schooler be as competitive as a "traditional" student?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:8:49 here. To your first question... all the colleges my son looked at were definitely open to the possibility. Homeschooling is not so unusual and, for example, it's likely that many D1 athletes homeschool so there have to be avenues for homeschoolers to be accepted most everywhere.
That said, it's clear that at some schools the bar might be raised in other areas because the academic transcript might be considered "less reliable." At least, that was our concern. But again, my kid got into very selective colleges, including some with single digit acceptance rates so I do think that most colleges are genuinely open to the profile.
Most D1 athletes don’t homeschool except for maybe elite tennis players.
You probably mean Olympic athletes that compete in non-NCAA sports.
However, nobody cares about their schooling much in these situations…and they nearly all have high-priced tutors and other supports helping with the college process.
It’s not like mom and dad are schooling them at home.
Anonymous wrote:8:49 here. To your first question... all the colleges my son looked at were definitely open to the possibility. Homeschooling is not so unusual and, for example, it's likely that many D1 athletes homeschool so there have to be avenues for homeschoolers to be accepted most everywhere.
That said, it's clear that at some schools the bar might be raised in other areas because the academic transcript might be considered "less reliable." At least, that was our concern. But again, my kid got into very selective colleges, including some with single digit acceptance rates so I do think that most colleges are genuinely open to the profile.