What you REALLY Need to KNOW to Apply to College -




Summary:  Going from homeschool to college just takes planning, and here is my guide to college for that, with a free download on college entrance requirements, validating the homeschool transcript, and how to make a 4 year homeschool high school plan for your teen who is homeschooling to college.



As homeschoolers, we are already experts in planning. We have searched for and chosen curriculum each year for our kids. We have decided on which subjects to focus on and how to teach them to our kids. 

Planning for high school, with college in mind is really no different, except for one important thing.....Now your teen has their college entrance entrance requirements to fulfill.  How to find out your teen's college requirements is discussed in depth in chapter one of my book, "Researching and Getting Started".

I made it into this FREE download...just click here


Some bloggers suggest that all we need to do is to check the college websites for their freshman entrance requirements.  

Is that right?

Actually the answer is that is a good start 

There are just two more pieces of information that are important to have.  And they are not hard to find....!

It is also important when preparing for college to also:

1.  Find out if there are any special homeschool requirements for your likely colleges, and many colleges still have them, but they are not hard to deal with and.....

2.   Check to see what the colleges require re testing -  SAT or ACT - and also - Do they also require the writing portion of the test or not?

Most colleges still do require the SAT or the ACT, but there are many that do not require the writing portion.

And if they don't require that writing portion, then your teen doesn't need to do it!  We did not need to do the writing portion of the SAT, and that was great news for our teen!

More on that is in the FREE download mentioned above. Just click here

This download includes

- how to research college websites 
- the typical requirements for different types of colleges 
- tips for finding out about homeschool requirements
- how to find out what test is required SAT or ACT, or none!
- whether the writing portion of the SAT or ACT is required or not!  

Once you have this information from my free download, then you have all 3 pieces of information that you need for your teen to apply to college.

When we had that, we were ready to make a 4 year plan for our high schooler.

Making an Overall High School Plan

With our list of admission requirements in hand, we sketched out what our high school years might look like.....with our best guesses of what we wanted to do when.


Our overall plan was flexible, and revised and reworked every year, as life happened.  Yet it was a helpful guide for us, and ours looked something like this:

 BJ's 4 YEAR PLAN

My Teen's Requirements:
4 English
2 Sciences with Lab
3 Math with one Math-oriented Science in Senior Year
3 Social Studies
2 Foreign Language
+ Electives to equal 24 - 26 credits

My teen's first day on campus.
____________________________
 9th grade
World History
English (lit and composition)
Science - Physical Science (good prep for bio next year)
Math - Algebra 1
Elective - Photography
PE
______________________________________________________
10th grade

Foreign Language - Spanish 1
Science - Biology with Lab
Math - Geometry
English (lit and comp) - We chose the novels 
 PE/Health 

Take the PSAT for test taking practice
______________________________________________________
 11th grade

Foreign Language - Spanish 2
 US History 
Science - Chemistry with lab
Math- Algebra 2
English- We did American Lit (fun to do with US History)
 Elective - Art Drawing

Take the SAT or ACT first time
______________________________________________________
12th Grade

Science - Physics - for special interest
 US Government - for my teen's interest 
English - We made our own in British Lit
2 Electives:
Video-Making
College Planner (see end of post for info)
PE

Take SAT or ACT again if needed

(We did SAT prep and retook it)
______________________________________________________

Your plan could be similar or entirely different from mine, depending on:

1.  Your college choice's admission requirements

2.  Your college's extra homeschool requirements, if any  (Do check this and ask Admissions if it is not listed)

3.  Special requirements for prospective math/science majors  (They usually need 4 years of math, and 4 years of science)

4.  Your homeschooling style, your teen's goals

5.  Your teen's interests 


How We Managed Stress re Preparing for College

Building in the fun.


To be honest, this whole preparing for college thing was overwhelming to us at first. What we did to combat that, was first to build in the play....like go to the zoo.  Teens still love that too!

Then secondly, it also REALLY helped me to plan ahead and lay out a tentative overall plan for the high school years.  

And it was very tentative, that helped us a lot too!  We made lots of time for fun and going to the zoo!

Making this flexible 4 Year High School Plan helped us in these ways:

1.  First, if I had this plan to follow, I would be less likely to forget a requirement or two, and have to scramble in senior year, to fit it in. 

2.  Secondly, it freed my teen to focus on building her interests, because our core studies were already set in mind and on paper.

3.  It gave us confidence to push forward, and enjoy the high school years.

Our Homemade College Planner Course

My teen was  a big part of our planning.

Did you notice the elective called College Planner that I listed above, in Senior Year?  

First let me mention that you don't have to do a course like this. We just did it to give my teen credit for all her work preparing for the SAT.  

We gave her credit for her work doing that and just made a very simple homemade course called College Planner.  We included her work on:

SAT prep
Studying college websites
Visiting colleges
Taking any career tests or interest tests
Working on her college essay
and more.

We called it College Planner and each of my teen's colleges accepted this credit.  That was such a help during the busy senior year!  But you could do it junior year, whatever works for you.  

We just estimated the hours spent on these activities, and described them briefly in her course descriptions.  More on course descriptions are in my book.

Then we put our planner away....


Aiming towards college, step by step, allowed us to prepare for the college admission process, while keeping our focus on our nurturing homeschool style, front and center! 
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Have you seen my NEW High School Guide yet? 



Purchasing my book also helps me to continue blogging about high school and college topics, to keep us all up to date on the latest news re homeschooling to college.

Have you seen Tricia Hodges's video courses in art yet?



Taught by a master artist, and offered by Tricia Hodges, mom of 5 blessings who are all homeschooled.  

This is a full one year course, ideal for your teen who is interested in art.   Get your fine arts requirement done (for college bound teens) with this easy to use video course!  

Perfect for independent study! No need for a long list of supplies. Just get some paper and some chalk art pastels and you are ready!



Thanks for stopping by!  

Betsy


Betsy is mom to her now college grad, whom she homeschooled through high school.  She blogs at BJ's Homeschool, about the early yearshigh schoolcollege, special needs/2e and wrote - Homeschooling High School with College in Mind.   She offers free homeschool help through messages at BJ's Consulting and has had her articles picked up by the Huffington Post.


Want to stay in touch?

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Don't forget your download....




Copyright @ BJ's Homeschool 2017
Updated 2019 

All Rights Reserved



Homeschool High School - Make a Four Year Plan -



This post has moved.  Just click the link below to reach it.


Thanks for stopping by!  

Betsy


Betsy is mom to her now college grad, whom she homeschooled from day one.  She blogs at BJ's Homeschool, about the early yearshigh school & college and wrote the book - Homeschooling High School with College in Mind.   She offers free homeschool help through messages at BJ's Consulting

Want to stay in touch?


Subscribers will get the first chapter free! 


Click here to get yours!

This post was shared on my favorite linkups here.

Copyright @ BJ's Homeschool 2017 
All Rights Reserved

Our Homeschool Room for High School -





Today, I am sharing how we fixed up our homeschool space for my high schooler.  It was really just a place to study in her bedroom, as we have a small home, without a dedicated homeschool space.

We had a lot of fun doing this together.  I wanted her to have a cozy place to study, and she was looking forward to having it in her own room.  We didn't have a desk in the house, so we set about making one.

This entire space was homemade, including the desk.....


Making a Desk

 Here it is, below..



We combined a small chest of drawers with a wooden table, that we already had.  Then we went to Goodwill, together, and looked around for a desk shelf.  

Can you see the fish rug on the floor above?  It was made from a puzzle, that my teen put together, then just added a layer of clear packing tape.  By the way, our kitten ran in while I was taking this picture, so he was a surprise addition to it...!



We then, found a desk chair at a garage sale. After that, my daughter went about decorating it with her favorite things. She put in her touches, to make it her own.  I loved how she kept one of her stuffed penguins, and found a place for it, in her high school desk area.


Can you see the penguin here?  She also stores our printer on her desk, one that we found used from a computer shop.  

Next, my teen did some simple redecorating, along the walls of her room.  She took down her old things, and updated them with her new finds, including this one....





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I am offering a free download today, that will help you RELAX about College - What YOU Need to KNOW about College



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The Reading Nook


Well, we decided that we also needed to redo the reading nook. This was a little reading area, was and here's how we used it, when she was young. 



 It used to have a large stuffed whale pillow on it!  Of course, that went by the way......My daughter decided to use the same bookshelves, and remake it into a teen reading space....




Next, we went shopping for school supplies, getting what was needed for certain subjects, like a protractor for math, along with lots of spiral notebooks.  We bought three for each subject.  We gathered together all the supplies and books needed for each subject, and just put them into a box.




Our Workboxing Method

We used the spiral notebooks for her written work, such as essay drafts, math problems, taking notes on a history text, etc.  That way, we didn't have the problem of losing and having to find this paper and that.


It was our version of the workboxing method...I know it is not truly workboxing, but it was our way of doing it!  And. later, when my daughter started college, she took the concept of workboxing, with her to college, and it helped her alot!  




That's how we set up things for high school.


Of course, the desk was not the only place where she would study....But it was a favorite place to study, next to going to the coffee shop!  And then there's all the fun, high school activities that our kids can do, too!


And, our nature studies, of course, always took us outside, to  explore the pacific northwest through mini-road trips. Sometimes my teen "took me", as she was practicing her driving skills....

And now, my previously very neat and tidy one, will finally let herself get muddy....yes!

Thanks for stopping by, to see where our homeschooling high school happened...and, as you know,


At a video-making contest
Homeschooling happens everywhere!


Don't forget your free download today, that will help you RELAX and it tells you some of what you need to KNOW re College for your Teen.



This post is a part of the 9th Annual Back to Homeschool Blog Hop-SchoolRoomWeek.  Check out all the other great posts from other homeschoolers.


 Also on the blog:



Thanks for stopping by!  

Betsy


Betsy is mom to her now college senior, whom she homeschooled from day one.  She blogs at BJ's Homeschool, about the early yearshigh school & college and wrote the book - Homeschooling High School with College in Mind.  She offers free homeschool help through messages at BJ's Consulting

Want to stay in touch?


Copyright @ BJ's Homeschool 2017 
All Rights Reserved






Also on the blog:







Thanks for stopping by BJ's Homeschool,

Betsy




Betsy is a veteran homeschooler who blogs at BJ's Homeschool, about the early yearshigh school and college too.  She offers homeschool help and free messages at BJ's Consulting.  Her e-book, "Homeschooling High School with College in Mind" is available on Amazon.


Want to stay in touch? 



 Subscribe Pinterest | G+ | Twitter | Facebook


This post was shared on my favorite linkups here.
Copyright @BJ's Homeschool 2016


All Rights Reserved















No Room for a School Room - Where Our Homeschooling Happens





We have a very small home, with just two bedrooms, so we had to be creative about our homeschool organization.  Our homeschool space, through the years, has been ever-changing and evolving...

And we used a variety of techniques.....One year, it was a little preschool desk in our living room.  Then the next year, we used our dining room table.

I borrowed our dining room hutch and filled it with our homeschool books and supplies.  The dishes were placed in our kitchen shelves! The books took up all of our hutch, but that was ok.

I remember starting out with my 4 year old, when we just used a wooden table that we set it by the window, for my daughter to practice her letters and such....



..She could watch for birds at the same time....



Science happened wherever we were, as long as we had a pail for collecting her important specimens.....


Then, in the kitchen, we encouraged our young artist with pudding fingerpainting, drawing, gluing, cutting, and even painting with apples.  I just had to remember to cover the table with a plastic tablecloth, first, lol!



One year, we wanted to have a special space for reading.  So we just made a little reading space in my daughter's bedroom.

For a reading nook, I used a bookcase from the thrift store, and filled it with books, changing them out as she developed her reading skills.  Most of the books were either presents from family or found at one of our local children's consignment stores.

Here is how our Book Nook looked, in the early years...



We found the whale at a local garage sale.  It was great for my little one, to snuggle up with, and even read to!
My daughter continued to fill this bookcase with her favorites, through the years, including books that she saved from her Oak Meadow literature courses and other books special to her. 

Here's how our updated book nook looks today...



These days, my teen prefers to study here.....



....in her own room, with the desk that she set up herself, decorated with her favorite things.  She used the same wooden table you saw from her earlier years, and just added the top piece from a desk set that she found at Goodwill.

The fish rug in the picture, above, was made from a puzzle years ago, that she put together with a layer of plastic.  And she added a penguin stuffed animal, as well, one of her cherished things.  By the way, our kitten ran in while I was taking this picture, so he was a surprise addition to it...





That's all about our homeschooling space, at home.  But lots of our homeschooling took place outside of it...

...starting with preschool ballet, music class, etc, and ending with Youth and Government activities.  Here's a picture from that teen activity....




And, our nature studies, of course, always took us outside.  First, to explore our backyard, then later to explore the pacific northwest through road trips. Sometimes my teen "took me", as she was practicing her driving skills....


And now, my previously very neat and tidy little one, will finally let herself get muddy....yes!

Thanks for stopping by, to see where our homeschooling happened...and,  you know,

Homeschooling happens everywhere!

Are you looking for a few more resources for your elementary or preschool kids?  Here's a bunch of our favorites, tried and true!


and preschool too - Click here.





This post is linked to the Not Back to School Blog Hop - School Room Week.



Hope that your first weeks back are super!!



Betsy


Betsy is mom to her now college senior, whom she homeschooled from day one.  She blogs at BJ's Homeschool, about the early yearshigh school & college and wrote the book - Homeschooling High School with College in Mind.  She offers free homeschool help through messages at BJ's Consulting

Want to stay in touch?


Copyright @ BJ's Homeschool 2017 
All Rights Reserved




























BJ's Day in the Life for Elementary - How Our Days Really Roll




Take a look into our homeschooling days during elementary times, how they went, and how they didn't, one day at a time in our house. #adayinthelife #homeschooling 



Today, I am sharing how our days usually went for the elementary years, the time in my daughter's life that gave her the basics and, most importantly-- a love of learning. 

My 2e daughter had some attentional issues similar to ADHD, was an intense child, (OE) when she was young and had some sensory issues as well. Homeschooling met her needs so much better than public school.  

Having a structure to her day was so important as she also had some anxiety, and structure helped her to relax and anticipate what would happen next.

 At first we used a simple written schedule, that was posted in our living room, our main learning area.  

Changes in our schedule would cause anxiety.  Having a written schedule that my kiddo could see and refer to, was a great help.

Our "Usual" Early Elementary 
Day

  

Morning Start - Breakfast together, getting dressed and  singing songs from the Wee Sing books.  I dearly treasured these early mornings.  It got us off to a positive start.

Then, in a few years, we added a bible study. We began be lighting a candle, then turned to the bible verse for the day, and read the story that went along with it.  This led to many great early morning talks.

That was the plan - Often the candle did not get found or lit.  

Then it was time for play, a video, or an audio book from the library, while I got ready for the day.  

Morning Studies - We always started with a favorite, which was Explode the Code (ETC), for many years. Then we worked in math, spelling, reading, and writing.  


There were LOTS of breaks needed.

We focused on just the 3 R's - reading, writing, and math all the way through 3rd grade.  We needed that much time to cover the basics, as we also needed to take a lot of breaks, to "run" off my daughter's energy!  

So we did not do science or social studies until 4th grade, also another great help.




- Break Time - Sometimes we used an exercise ball, and my kid would bounce across the living room.  Other times she needed to just jump off the couch, roll around the carpet, do cartwheels across the room.  Or run around the back yard.  

We took these active breaks a lot.  

Or when I need one!   Early on, my daughter was full of questions almost all the time, so sometimes I really needed a break too.  

When I needed a mama break, we used what we called "room play time".  I put my feet up and relaxed, and she listened to a cd, read to herself or played in her room.  These breaks were so important to me and for managing my own stress level.


Every Thursday morning we did some handwork, like hand sewing, very easy knitting or something similar together.  It was a nice tradition, something that we looked forward to each week.

Clean up/ Lunch -  We started in preschool, with this little cleanup song...and added in chores as she grew.

"Clean up, clean up,
Everybody clean up,
Put the toys in the box,
Everybody clean up."

My chores like laundry and light cleaning were done before or after lunch usually.  My kiddo liked helping.


- Afternoon Activities - During these earlier years, the afternoons were all about free play, simple art projects, errands, running to the park, that kind of thing.

My daughter's favorite thing to do was going to the park to explore the streams, look for birds, etc.
  

Before Dinner - This was often time for a video while I prepared dinner.  

-  Dinner -  Flexible depending on hubby's schedule.



Bedtime Routine -  Bath, story, more stories, bed.

By the time bath time rolled around, my hubby often was able to take on that, and my daughter loved to read aloud to him. .

Bedtime was set up for 8pm, but my hubby often wanted her to stay up, so it was flexible.  

At the same time, we tried to stick with the bedtime, as we parents needed parent time to recharge.

Things changed in 4th grade...


Our Homeschool Schedule
4th - 6th Grade


In 4th we added in science and social studies.  

We used Oak Meadow curriculum for our history and English for many years, and liked how it included literature, related to the history topics, and tons of hands on projects.  Hands-on was very popular at our house!  My daughter's learning style was visual and kinesthetic.



At this time, our schedule became more specific.  

It looked something like this:

- 9 am - Math
- 10 am - Explode the Code advanced, Spelling
- 11 am - History and English combined, often Oak Meadow, hands-on projects, lit related to the history lesson.  Or interest led.

Lunch

- 1 pm - Watch educational videos together, finish chores
-  2pm - Science, Writing, or Art
-  3pm - Take a walk, go to the park, do PE inside with a tape

We spent a lot of time on organizational skills at this age, helping my daughter find a good system for keeping herself organized. 

This was an issue for many years.

We used spiral notebooks, one for each subject, and all of the written work was put into them.  That eliminated the need to find that specific sheet of paper, that sort of thing.

Afternoons were for free time, reading, videos, games. Or heading out to a friend's house, taking a walk, reading, etc.

Evenings there was sometimes a class like gymnastics, which was great outlets for my daughter's intense energy.  

And she turned her high activity level into a strength!

When I felt tired or my daughter needed a break, we quit our studies and went to the park or for a short drive.  Getting out in nature was a great stress relief for both of us!

Mom Self Care - I also built in time for a bath for mom (when my hubby could help out), or quiet reading time for me, and a weekly date with my hubby, when we had a babysitter.  

Never feel badly about taking time for yourself.  We can only give to others when we have a full cup ourselves.  I remember how hard it was to do that, especially early on.  

This is how our elementary days tended to go, with lots of variations on the theme, as life happened, eg, sinus infections, the flu, or just needing a break, etc.  We schooled from September through early June, then took off for the summer.  

This is how she grew......





Are you curious how our days looked during the high school years? Here's "A Week in My Teen's High School Life", all about how we did high school at home.....




This post is a part of the 9th Annual Back to Homeschool Blog Hop.  Check out all the other great posts from iHN homeschoolers and more.





Thanks for stopping by BJ's Homeschool,


Betsy



Betsy is mom to her now rising college senior, whom she homeschooled from preK through high school.  She blogs at BJ's Homeschool, about the early yearshigh school & college and wrote - Homeschooling High School with College in Mind.   She offers free homeschool help through messages at BJ's Consulting

Want to stay in touch?


Copyright, 2017, All Rights Reserved

A Week in my Homeschool High School Life -



Do you want to get a peek into what our high school at home looks like?

I sure did when I first got started.  Here is a sample of a day and a week in my teen's high school life.

This post has moved.  The new link is below:


  


Thanks for stopping by BJ's Homeschool,

Betsy


Betsy is mom to her now college grad, whom she homeschooled from preK through high school.  She blogs at BJ's Homeschool, about the early yearshigh school & college and wrote - Homeschooling High School with College in Mind.   She offers free homeschool help through messages at BJ's Consulting

Want to stay in touch?



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This post was shared on my favorite linkups here.


Copyright 2019
All Rights Reserved

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