FAQ About Homeschooling

Homeschooling FAQ Wrap-up

Homeschooling FAQ Wrap-up

For part of 2025, I have decided to do blog posts centering around frequently asked homeschool questions. I have been asked these questions or seen them in various online spaces. While I am sure there are plenty of questions I haven't answered, I am wrapping up this series for the year here.

I began the series by discussing how to get started with homeschooling. I have discussed this before (HERE), and there is even a small series of helpful videos available HERE on my webpage. We no longer need to be qualified to teach because, as your children's parents, you are uniquely qualified to teach them, having done so from the moment they were born.

How Can I Be Around My Kids All Day?

How Can I Be Around My Kids All Day?

For part of 2025, I have decided to do blog posts centering around frequently asked homeschool questions. I have been asked these questions or seen them in various online spaces. This question surprised me, but yet it doesn't either. I see this question a lot when people have had little experience with homeschooling and pose it almost as an objection to homeschooling. How can homeschoolers stand to be around their kids all day?

 

While this question disturbs me somewhat, as I said, I have seen it more as a reason people don't want to homeschool. So I sat back and thought about it; I see these questions in plain sight in stay-at-home mom groups and mom groups all the time, in some form or another. I have also seen it asked in the form of "What do you do with your kid outside of school time?". I have also seen "I'm not here to entertain my kid all day."

What Do I Need to Homeschool?

What Do I Need to Homeschool?

For part of 2025, I have decided to do blog posts centering around frequently asked homeschool questions. I have been asked these questions or seen them in various online spaces. This post will dive into the "needs" of homeschooling. With public school, you often have a list of two or three school supplies to buy, while homeschooling requires fewer items. However, as the years have gone by, we've found that some things have become very handy for us. I have taken the time to compile our list of things here.

The most basic thing you need in your homeschool is STUDENTS (ha ha…). But more seriously, you need a plan; even if you're unschooling, you still need to plan —that's what you're doing so that you can track what's going on at the back of your mind.

What Types of Homeschooling Are There?

What Types of Homeschooling Are There?

For part of 2025, I have decided to do blog posts centering around frequently asked homeschool questions. I have been asked these questions or seen them in various online spaces. In this post, I will discuss the various types of homeschooling, just as there are different types of learners and even different types of public schools (such as charter, Montessori, STEM, etc.). I have found that there are nine common types of homeschooling.

The Hardest and Easiest Part of Homeschooling

The Hardest and Easiest Part of Homeschooling

For part of 2025, I have decided to do blog posts centering around frequently asked homeschool questions. I have been asked these questions or seen them in various online spaces. In many homeschool groups in the online space, ask about the easiest and hardest things about homeschooling. Like most of these last few blog posts, I can only speak about what has been my own experience. My hardest and easiest parts may not be yours, but they may still help shed some light.

But What About Socialization?

But What About Socialization?

For part of 2025, I have decided to do blog posts centering around frequently asked homeschool questions. I have been asked these questions or seen them in various online spaces. In many homeschool groups in the online space, parents are concerned about Socialization. UH! This is like nails to the chalkboard, adding nauseum, etc. Socialization is just a horrible, nasty, and vial term amongst the homeschool community. I have addressed it before in a blog post titled We are Planty Socialized (I Promise)!

How Long Does it Actually Take?

How Long Does it Actually Take?

For part of 2025, I have decided to do blog posts centering around frequently asked homeschool questions. I have been asked these questions or seen them in various online spaces. In many homeschool groups in the online space, parents are asking how long homeschooling actually takes. Just like anything, it can vary from one family to the next. Still, generally, it doesn’t and shouldn’t take all day as traditional public school does. I have seen information like this graphic in several places. It is a good rule of thumb and guideline to try to follow (loosely) if you take less time or more time. As long as you are not being overly rigorous or skipping out on everything, you should be fine somewhere within these guidelines.

How Do I Choose Curriculum, and What About the Cost?

How Do I Choose Curriculum, and What About the Cost?

In many homeschool groups on the online space, parents are asking for the best curriculums out there. Very rarely will a whole collective group of homeschooling parents agree on what the best curriculum of all time is. Because really, there isn’t the best curriculum for everyone, but there is the best curriculum for your particular family unit. No homeschooling family is alike.

There are literally thousands of curriculum choices out there. From all-in-ones, piecing together, hodge-podge, you name it, and it is out there, with technology, homeschooling curriculum, and choices have become a lot more readily available than they once were.

But What About Graduation?

But What About Graduation?

When have you ever been asked to show your high school diploma? Do you carry it around in your back pocket with your driver’s license? Probably not. I am not trying to provoke anyone in that statement, but it is what it is. If you are the parent, then that qualifies you to homeschool your children. Under your state’s laws, you are also qualified to issue a homeschooling diploma on your student’s behalf.