I am a college senior who was home-schooled 1st-12th grade. Neither my sister or myself had any trouble getting accepted into the colleges of our choice. The suggestions in the previous two answers were good. Start by listing out the subjects you cover, then divide them into classes. There are on-line GPA calculators you can use, entering either percentage or letter grades. These may be helpful in establishing a GPA and transcript. If you are a part of any type of umbrella support program, they may be able to help you with any specifics concerning your state.
Each of the schools I applied to required that I present a transcript, but awarded scholarships based on SAT and ACT scores, not on high school grades. Most private schools are eager to get home-school students, and will accept transcript grades and GPA if they are substantiated by comparable test scores. Also, many colleges now have sections in their admissions catalogs detailing procedure for home-school students.
Good luck!
2006-06-15 09:28:15
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answer #1
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answered by knot4sail16 2
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Many colleges do not accept GPA from home school. Instead they focus on psat and sat scores and portfolio of work projects, as well as a list of courses completed and the amount of time.
While it varies from college to college, The U Washington has the following requirements for home schoolers.
Home schooled applicants must present a home school transcript that includes course titles of each subject studied, duration of study, a short description of content, and grade or assessment of performance. Preferably, courses completed at home would adhere to a nationally recognized home schooled curriculum.
Home school course work must also be validated in the four core subject areas ... (SAT Scores)
2006-06-14 18:48:06
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answer #2
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answered by Carol P 5
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you want to envision with the workplace that keeps archives at your organization. some have the hot grade replace the former in a unmarried in the GPA besides the indisputable fact that the previous grade nevertheless shows up on the transcript and some have guidelines that get rid of the previous grade thoroughly. it would carry your GPA up in any accord, yet so a strategies as how your transcript will look, that is problematical to assert with out checking to understand for effective.
2016-10-30 22:11:06
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answer #3
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answered by harib 4
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Same as public schools - take all the work completed, give it a grade and weight for each part (written assignments, quizzes, tests, projects) and calculate the grade.
I don't do this yet and don't imagine I'll start until my oldest is in high school (when he'll really need a transcript). By then, I'll probably be using a lot more canned curriculum with packaged quizzes and tests.
2006-06-14 15:44:47
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answer #4
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answered by homeschoolmom 5
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simple Semester GPA Calculator:
http://www.everyday-education.com/gpacalc/index.shtml
:-D
2006-06-15 17:26:11
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answer #5
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answered by LadyE 4
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