I have decided to be home schooled i am in 12th grade and need to find a good curriculium, online program or something that will offer me or give me a dipolma(hopefully accredidted) when i finish this said program. I am very confused and would like some advice or good suggestions.
2007-09-12
16:56:44
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9 answers
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asked by
dickslap_judy
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in
Education & Reference
➔ Home Schooling
Hopefully something that doesn't cost to much!
2007-09-12
16:57:38 ·
update #1
none of your buissness i asked for advice not criticisim.
2007-09-12
17:07:45 ·
update #2
I also wanted to let you know - your curriculum doesn't have to give you your diploma for it to be legit. Your parents can sign your diploma and transcript, and it's perfectly fine. A parent-signed diploma and transcript is accepted by everyone from the local community college to Harvard or Berkeley.
There are plenty of good curricula out there that will keep your records and give you the diploma, but it's really not necessary as far as colleges or the military are concerned. This is basically to save you or your parents the record-keeping. Accreditation is mainly for if you're planning on going back into public school after your homeschooling year (which you're obviously not) - accreditation makes it more likely that the public school will accept your homeschooling credits.
Every college or university in America accepts homeschool transcripts and diplomas (accredited or not), as long as they are complete and accurate. It is fully legit for you to pull your own curriculum together, make a course outline with your parents, and graduate with it. To this end, here are some curriculum options you may want to look into:
English/Writing/Language Arts:
IEW (Institute for Excellence in Writing): http://www.writing-edu.com/ They have every writing program you could want :-)
http://www.hewitthomeschooling.com/book/blight.asp More good lit analysis stuff
http://www.sonlight.com/ Excellent literature based program
http://veritaspress.com/store/products.asp?dept=1087&Grade=Ninth&Subject=Omnibus Good literature based worldview curriculum, classical
Math:
http://www.mathusee.com/ Very conceptually based, taught by DVD
http://saxonhomeschool.harcourtachieve.com/en-US/saxonhomeschool.htm?MSCSProfile=DCCDF22EB27065BE12C6F42F5763BD06B7DC23E1B0B858A9BD11CD436D3C347B6468BA071C9504D70E5132D99A4D0F832C7E532E611B4F1A1CF5A6AC9785DDD25A10831CA61E567233A22E2D3E9CFA4B5F7781CE828C4AD623CFF9B29E67E279B60D82DB779FEF7346DF71801EEDAE14BC1EA3134799C4C2E36660D14D8F29D8&UserPref=culture%5Een-US Not one of my faves, but a lot of people use it with success
History:
http://trisms.com/ This is excellent, and will cover your history, geography, lit, writing, humanities, and lots of other stuff. You make your own coursebook as you go along and research what is important to you. I'll be using this for my son from 6th-12th.
Science:
http://www.highschoolscience.com/store/?PHPSESSID=15bee2e1f65d288cf494107c7af13da0 One of the best curriculums I've seen for science. Includes AP as well for bio/anatomy, chem, and physics. All books can be supplemented by MP3 and/or CDRom.
Here are some good "boxed" curriculums to look at, as well:
http://www.abeka.com/
http://www.bjupress.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/StoreCatalogDisplay?storeId=10001&langId=-1&catalogId=10001
http://www.aop.com/home/ They have several different options, including an academy where they will take care of the records and such for you.
And here is a place you can find almost all of the above at a discount: http://www.rainbowresource.com/index.php
Whatever you choose to do, hope that helps!
2007-09-13 01:26:51
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answer #1
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answered by hsmomlovinit 7
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2016-12-23 21:47:14
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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When she was sailing the Carribean with her parents, my neice used the University of Nebraska. My sister is a certified teacher and is pretty picky about programs. The U of N has a very good secular accredited high school correspondance program. I have no idea how much it costs but I do know that my neice had no problem getting back into high school the next year or into a private Lutheran university in Texas the year after that. The U of N would also give you a diploma if you graduted from them. Google the University of Nebraska home study high school program and see if you like that. I remember that it is not very cheap but it is an exceptional way to get a high school diploma through correspondance.
2007-09-12 20:35:12
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answer #3
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answered by delemamomma 4
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I am entering the 12th grade and I have been using James Madison High School (Although now they are Ashworth High I believe) for the past 2 years. They are a regionally accredited program and offer a diploma.
If you already have credits from your former high school these will count towards the credits you need to receive your diploma from JMHS. They offer 2 diploma programs a general program and a college prep program. IMO the college prep program is a better choice if you plan on going to college because it requires harder courses and more credits.
Let me know if you need any more information.
(*Also the pricing is about $37 a month)
2007-09-12 18:17:15
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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I do not know where you are from, but here in Florida we have a dual enrollment program. You can actually go ahead and take college courses at the local college and earn your diploma at the same time. My daughter , who has been home schooled since 6th grade, will be using this option for her junior and senior years. May be something to look into to!
2007-09-13 00:38:20
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answer #5
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answered by Melissa C 5
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Any site on Texas homeschooling will be helpful. As a homeschooler in Texas, you are considered a private school. Your parents would/could include your CA credits as part of your program and then decide what you would need to do to graduate homeschooling. You don't need to register, file documents or anything. You just do your thing.
2016-04-04 18:13:31
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Check out NARHS. It does cost about $3 or 400.
Good Luck :)
2007-09-12 17:19:14
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answer #7
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answered by wildeyedredhead 5
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Who is home schooling you? And why is this person not finding an appropriate curriculum? This is not supposed to be YOUR job.
2007-09-12 18:12:59
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answer #8
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answered by treebird 6
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Wondering why you could not stick it out in standard school for another year?
2007-09-12 17:04:30
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answer #9
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answered by G.V. 6
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