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March 18, 2011

Can I start getting home schooled in the middle of the school year?

Question by Party Pooper: Can I start getting home schooled in the middle of the school year?
I have to attend a school which is very far away from my house and I’ve already missed a lot of days of school to make up for the work I’ve missed so it all seems a bit tedious. Can I just drop out of that school and start getting home schooled or online homeschooling?

Best answer:

Answer by Lorelei C
Your parents would need to discuss this with your school district.

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Where can my 16 year old home school student take her GED?

Question by gerlawgoody1: Where can my 16 year old home school student take her GED?
In Illinois, a home school is considered a private school, so I may home school anyone. My student is a 16 year old, soon to be an emancipated minor. Illinois does not recognize emancipated minor status educationallly. My student would not be allowed to test for GED here until 2009! Even though she is legally an adult!
Please advise. Are there any states that will test her early?

Also, does anyone know how to get a pell grant with a home school diploma?

Best answer:

Answer by Steven S
Talk to your local school board or department of education of your state or any surrounding state.

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March 17, 2011

How many hours do you home school your 1st or 2nd grader?

home school
by perpetualplum

Question by donnyandmelissa@att.net: How many hours do you home school your 1st or 2nd grader?
He is 7 and currently in a public school he is reading on a 3rd grade level and he loves math addition subtraction and multiplication!
I want to home school but need more info on other parents day. Is it scheduled?

Best answer:

Answer by North
My six year old is reading at about a grade 2 level. He schools four days a week from about 9:00-10:30. Sometimes we go a little later but we are rarely as late as 11:00. That’s more than enough time to cover all of the subjects. My kids do the same science and social but their L.A. and Math are geared to their age. If you’re worried about scheduling, look at this link:

http://www.sonlight.com/

My kids love this program. It’s especially great if your family loves literature.
After the “schooling” is done, we usually spend the afternoon outside or on outings. This week, we’ve gone on a hike, visited a senior’s home (we do that monthly, with a group of homeschoolers), and gone swimming at a hotel with a water slide. Tomorrow or Friday, we’re going to go to the woods to find things for the kids to put in their nature journals. They get to do so much more, and they are leaning so much more as well. I found out yesterday that my four year old can name almost twenty five different local birds! That alone makes it worth it for me.

EDIT: I just wanted to add…the only real negative I’ve experienced is that my housework sometimes suffers. Many people get their housework done while their kids are away at school. My kids are here with all of their glue and paint and glitter and leaves and pencil shavings and what not. We resolved that by having daily twenty minute tidy ups and mass cleaning on Saturday mornings. Everyone helps.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

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What is the best high school home school program if I live out of the country?

home school
by Johan Koolwaaij

Question by Mandy: What is the best high school home school program if I live out of the country?
I live out of the country (Mexico) and I want to home school. Im in 10th grade. What is the best homeschooling program?

Best answer:

Answer by glurpy
You live out of the country? Do you mean you live in the country? There are people in this forum from all over the world, so I’m not sure if you mean you don’t live in the US or if you mean you live in the country.

By program, do you mean a distance learning school or just a prepackaged set of books? I don’t know about anything for distance learning, but for books or computer-based programs, you could try A Beka, Alpha Omega, Sonlight and unfortunately I’ve forgotten some others. But those would be starting places.

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March 14, 2011

New Thinkbox Advert – Every home needs a Harvey

Thinkbox’s new ad launched on broadcast TV on Friday 10 September 2010 The ad features a couple visiting a dogs’ home to choose a dog to adopt. They see two conventionally lovable dogs using all their considerable charms to sell themselves before they encounter a less obviously cute dog called Harvey, who has a different, smarter approach: he’s made a TV ad. Harvey then turns on a TV behind him which plays out an ad showcasing his amazing skills. The couple watch with increasing amazement as Harvey demonstrates why he’s the best choice; he plays chess, does the school run, cooks, irons, cleans windows, and tucks children in for the night. Harvey’s ad ends with the line ‘Every home needs a Harvey’. The soundtrack to the ad is Bachman-Turner Overdrive’s 1974 classic ‘You ain’t seen nothing yet’. Perfect for a bit of air guitar.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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Can you transfer home school credits to public school?

Question by Phaidrus: Can you transfer home school credits to public school?
I am from Farmington NM and was wondering what the laws regarding credit transfer are. I am part of an accredited home school program called Kolbe Academy, and I’m in 11th grade. I plan on going to public school for my senior year, but I don’t want to have to start high school over again (obviously). So will the credits that I’ve earned in home schooling count toward a public school diploma?

Best answer:

Answer by Tara
Yes they count. You will not have to repeat your classes.

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March 13, 2011

Colorado Student Refused Medical Marijuana In School

Transcript by www.newsy.com BY JENNIFER MECKLES You’re watching multisource politics news analysis from Newsy A Colorado teenager can’t go to school because of a medicine he’s prescribed — medical marijuana. He uses the drug to help him with a rare health condition, but his school says — not on our watch. The teen experiences seizures and he takes the medical marijuana in a lozenge or pill form to relieve the pain. At first, he worked out a deal with his Colorado Springs school to go home and take the medicine when he needs it, since it’s not allowed on campus. (KDVR) But after one recent trip — the school told him to stay home. A Colorado Connection reporter spoke to the student (who didn’t want to be identified) and his father SHAN MOORE (father): “I get a phone call from my mother saying that the school called and said he could not return to school, because he’s gonna be under the influence of THC.” STUDENT: “All my friends are, like you know, getting their education, getting like, grow up to actually be something. It kind of felt like — uh, wasn’t going to amount to anything.” The local ABC affiliate interviewed the founder of Coloradoans for Cannabis Patients Rights. She leads the ensuing debate: “Their [schools] are able to keep Vicodin and other prescription drugs at school in a locked case. There should be a provision allowable like this to happen, rather than for this man to be walking home during an attack because he can’t have it on school grounds.” But the
Video Rating: 5 / 5

High school theater’s brightest stars gathered last night to see who would take home the coveted award for Most Awkward Kiss. More coverage at: onion.com

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March 12, 2011

The Magic School Bus Theme Song (One True Media)

The Magic School Bus is a Canadian-American Saturday morning animated television series based on the book series of the same name by Joanna Cole. It is notable for its use of celebrity talent and combining entertainment with an educational show, according to an article in Animation World Magazine by Annemarie Moody incorporating an interview with Executive Producer Deborah Forte. Broadcasting & Cable said the show was “among the highest-rated PBS shows for school-age children.” In 1994, The Magic School Bus concept was made into an animated series of the same name by Ellipse (France), Nelvana (Canada), and Scholastic Studios (USA-Canada), and premiered on September 10, 1994. Forte says that adapting the books into an animated series was opportunity to help kids “learn about science in a fun way”. Around that time, Forte had been hearing concern from parents and teachers about how to improve science education for girls and minorities. Each episode of the show ran about 30 minutes. In the United States, the show originally aired on PBS, through South Carolina’s SCETV network; it was the first fully animated series to be aired on PBS. The last episode aired on December 6, 1997, when the series stopped production. The Fox network aired repeated from September 1998 to September 2002. Starting September 27, 2010, the Magic School Bus started a daily run on qubo (United States), and on Saturday mornings on NBC. The theme song is cut short for no known reason on qubo airings

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March 11, 2011

How do home school kids get graded and how do they take tests and do they get report cards and if yes how?

home school
by dougfelt

Question by Bob j: How do home school kids get graded and how do they take tests and do they get report cards and if yes how?
I’m curious.Can par rents grade their kids that they are teaching,or is there a home school teacher that grades them.Are all their tests open book?I’m really curious. I’m talking about grade school and high school.

Best answer:

Answer by Shiori_hime
If your parents are teaching you, then generally they are also the ones grading you (unless you’re using an online course, correspondence course, or you’re talking about the standardized tests that have to be returned to a specific place for grading). How families structure testing is almost entirely up to them, and in places where no testing is required by the state many homeschooling families choose not to test at all because they see it as an artificial and fairly useless way of measuring knowledge. For families who do test (either because they want to or because the law says they must) whether or not a test is open-book is usually up to them. I have never heard of homeschoolers getting report cards, though I suppose some families might do it and it might be on option with online or correspondence programs. But I think most homeschooling families look at report cards as pretty useless measures of learning and prefer to base their assessments of their children’s learning off of more concrete things, like whether or not Jimmy can read a book and whether or not Sarah can figure out how much carpet she would need to buy if she wanted wall-to-wall carpeting in her room.

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Being home schooled is extremely depressing. how to convince my mom to put me in school next semester?

Question by cupcake: Being home schooled is extremely depressing. how to convince my mom to put me in school next semester?
I am sick of being in this depressing environment. How can I convince my mom to enroll me in school? I am super grateful she used to sacrifice her time for me, but now she has a job and I am teaching myself with this stupid program which is full of information I already know. I have problems motivating myself to do my work. I lack the incentive to succeed, since my competitive nature isn’t being stimulated. She won’t enroll me in any sports and its a rare occasion I leave home without my equally as depressing parents.

Best answer:

Answer by Greg
Public school is horrible, you’re better off home schooled.

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