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Does anyone know if it is legal (specifically in MN, WI, and MI) for highschoolers to homeschool themself without a designated adult teacher?

2006-10-30 13:04:02 · 10 answers · asked by sir'slady 4 in Education & Reference Home Schooling

Online schooling is an option, yes. I'm saying if they were home 50 - 75 % of the time alone (but being totally productive) is it possible and legal for them to school themselves?

2006-10-30 13:09:06 · update #1

10 answers

Any information you receive on here, except the advice to check out www.hslda.org or you state homeschool coalition, may not be accurate for your circumstances.
For example in my state, there is nothing anyone has to sign off on, no work that needs to be evaluated, checked or anything like that.
I know many highschool students that work on their own. that does not mean that their parents are not involved, that just means they are capable of doing a majority of their work alone.
My daughter is a highschool student and she works alone most of the time. I'm here for study help on her tests and quizzes, to point her in the right direction, help explain things she is unclear on, and to check her work.
After 5 years of homeschooling she has learned how to learn on her own.
This gives me the freedom to work more one on one with my second grader.
If your state allows it (hslda.org) then it is totally possible for you to work on your own. you will need support though, and hopefully you have a parent in the house that can help you when you need it. But if you live in a very strict state, this may not be possible for you legally.
good luck, and make sure you understand the rules specific to your situation.

2006-10-31 01:30:51 · answer #1 · answered by Terri 6 · 1 0

The best thing to do is to call or write the HSLDA.
http://www.hslda.org They will have all of the legal information that you will need to know.

It is entirely possible for a student to study without aid of an adult. The student may also consider signing up for classes at a community college. Many states have concurrent enrollment. The student may still need the signature of a parent.

A motivated student can self-teach with the proper tools for all of the basic subjects. Math, writing and reading can be accomplished entirely without a designated adult teacher.

2006-10-30 14:52:06 · answer #2 · answered by Barb 4 · 1 0

It's not uncommon at the high school level to have a parent designated as the teacher but the student spends 99% of his time simply working, not being taught by another person. So, have a parent designated as teacher, even if the only thing they do is to hear about what the student has done during the day.

2006-10-31 00:38:17 · answer #3 · answered by glurpy 7 · 2 0

It depends on your state law. Some Northern states are anti-home-schooling. Contact the local homeschool association there where you live. You can legally take correspondence from 'American School' in Lansing MI. They have a complete high school program. It is not the best, but many students graduate from there via correspondence and then go right into college.

2006-10-30 13:16:07 · answer #4 · answered by Desperado 5 · 1 0

i'm uncertain with reference to the regulations the place you're, however the certainty is that we are getting to grasp all our lives. inspect the state regulations in Alaska and do the paintings and exams which you would be able to desire to do to graduate. I domicile college my youngest daughter who's 9 years previous and now and lower back human beings think of that's a unusual and wonderful subject to be doing, yet particularly I variety of domicile schooled myself too. Thirty six years in the past, whilst i became 15 and starting to be up in England, I left college and have been given an entire-time pastime (long tale, i became fed up in college and my relatives needed the money), besides, my pastime required that I worked particularly late daily, yet I did get a ninety minute lunch smash. i'd bypass to the popular public Library and arranged for an hour and a nil.5. I examine something and each thing! I examine books on Anthropology, Psychology, track, pictures, historical Egypt, secret novels, the Occult, Classics, Nature & Wild existence - particularly in basic terms approximately something. whilst i glance lower back, that 2 years became became such an enriching time and became the time in my existence that a great quantity of getting to grasp befell - in all probability greater desirable than if I had stayed in school. I even have had a great existence, travelled plenty, married, had a relatives, taken countless nighttime-college classes, enrolled in college on the age of 40 and have been given my first year carried out - i'm now the mummy of five and grandma of three and a foster mom to many. i'm going to return to college interior right here few years and according to risk get my BA via the time i'm 60 - who knows! I nonetheless have a love of getting to grasp that has lasted in the process my existence - so sure, you could domicile college your self. do on no account stop!

2016-10-03 03:03:59 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

No, on the books your legal guardian or parent must sign off on the sheet and they are held responsible for your schooling. If its discovered that the person in question is not doing it social services can be called in and the parent or guardian held liable for your truancy from school. A third party who is not your guardian can not take responsibility for your home schooling.

2006-10-30 14:22:38 · answer #6 · answered by fancyname 6 · 0 1

No, You really do need to do online work and turn it in or do bookwork and turn it in. So an accredited program is recomended.

But if you really want to you could school till 17-18 years old then take your GED. I am pretty sure you could do that.

2006-10-31 01:01:17 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

no, there has to be a designated adult teacher

And depending on the type of homeschool program there is even education requirements for that adult

2006-10-30 13:12:41 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

I don't think so. You'd at least have to have an online course or something...

2006-10-30 13:07:08 · answer #9 · answered by life on stage 89 2 · 0 1

technecley, yes
legally, no

2006-10-30 13:10:49 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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