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Adaptive

Learn Homeschooling

Read the notes, then try the practice. It adapts as you go.When you're ready.

Session Length

~17 min

Adaptive Checks

15 questions

Transfer Probes

8

Lesson Notes

Homeschooling is an educational approach in which parents or guardians take primary responsibility for their children's education outside of traditional public or private school settings. Rather than attending a conventional classroom, homeschooled students learn at home or in community-based environments under the direction of a parent-educator. The practice has deep historical roots—prior to the advent of compulsory schooling laws in the 19th century, home-based education was the norm for most families. The modern homeschooling movement gained momentum in the 1970s and 1980s, driven by educators like John Holt, who advocated for child-led learning, and Raymond Moore, who argued that formal schooling at young ages could be developmentally harmful.

Homeschooling encompasses a wide spectrum of pedagogical philosophies and methods. Some families follow a structured, curriculum-based approach that mirrors traditional schooling with textbooks, lesson plans, and standardized testing. Others embrace unschooling, a philosophy rooted in the belief that children learn best when they follow their own interests and curiosity without imposed curricula. Between these poles lie approaches such as Charlotte Mason education (emphasizing living books and nature study), classical education (based on the trivium of grammar, logic, and rhetoric), and eclectic homeschooling, where families blend elements from multiple methods. Many homeschooling families also participate in co-ops, where parents share teaching duties and children benefit from group instruction and socialization.

The legal landscape for homeschooling varies significantly across jurisdictions. In the United States, homeschooling is legal in all 50 states, but regulations range from virtually no oversight in states like Alaska and Texas to substantial requirements in states like New York and Pennsylvania, which may mandate standardized testing, portfolio reviews, or individualized home instruction plans. Internationally, homeschooling legality differs widely: it is well-established in countries like the United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada, while it is heavily restricted or effectively illegal in countries such as Germany and Sweden. Research on homeschooling outcomes generally shows that homeschooled students perform at or above grade level on standardized assessments and tend to have strong college admission rates, though researchers note that self-selection effects make it difficult to draw causal conclusions about the effectiveness of homeschooling versus conventional schooling.

You'll be able to:

  • Compare homeschooling pedagogical approaches including classical education, Charlotte Mason, unschooling, and Montessori-inspired curricula
  • Design individualized learning plans that address state compliance requirements, learning style differences, and developmental milestones
  • Evaluate standardized assessment options, portfolio-based evaluation, and transcript preparation for college admissions and accountability
  • Apply multi-age instructional strategies and resource curation techniques to manage simultaneous learning across grade levels

One step at a time.

Key Concepts

Unschooling

An educational philosophy pioneered by John Holt in which children direct their own learning based on natural curiosity and interests, without formal curricula, lesson plans, or compulsory assignments.

Example: A child fascinated by dinosaurs spends weeks reading paleontology books, visiting natural history museums, and creating detailed sketches, learning biology, history, and art through self-directed exploration.

Classical Education

An approach to homeschooling based on the medieval trivium model, which divides learning into three stages: the grammar stage (memorization of facts), the logic stage (analytical thinking), and the rhetoric stage (persuasive expression).

Example: A 7-year-old memorizes multiplication tables and historical dates (grammar stage), while a 13-year-old analyzes the causes of the American Revolution (logic stage), and a 16-year-old writes and delivers a persuasive essay on constitutional law (rhetoric stage).

Charlotte Mason Method

An educational philosophy developed by British educator Charlotte Mason that emphasizes short lessons, living books (well-written narrative texts rather than dry textbooks), nature study, narration, and the formation of good habits.

Example: Instead of reading a textbook chapter about the Civil War, a student reads a historical novel set during that period, narrates the story back in their own words, and keeps a nature journal from weekly outdoor observation walks.

Homeschool Co-op

A cooperative arrangement in which multiple homeschooling families share teaching responsibilities, resources, and social opportunities. Co-ops may meet weekly or several times per month for group classes, science labs, or extracurricular activities.

Example: A group of twelve families meets every Friday: one parent with a chemistry background teaches science, another who speaks French leads a language class, and a third organizes a physical education session at a local park.

Deschooling

A transitional period when a child who has previously attended traditional school adjusts to the homeschooling environment by decompressing from institutional habits, expectations, and attitudes toward learning.

Example: After withdrawing from public school, a family takes several weeks without formal academics, allowing their child to rediscover intrinsic motivation for learning through free reading, creative projects, and unstructured play.

Scope and Sequence

A detailed outline of the topics and skills to be covered in a curriculum and the order in which they are presented. It serves as a roadmap for the academic year and ensures comprehensive subject coverage.

Example: A fourth-grade math scope and sequence begins with place value review, moves through multi-digit multiplication and division, then covers fractions, decimals, and concludes with basic geometry.

Unit Study

An integrated teaching approach in which multiple subjects such as history, science, language arts, and art are woven together around a single theme or topic, allowing for deeper and more connected learning.

Example: A unit study on ancient Egypt covers Egyptian history and geography, hieroglyphic writing as a language arts activity, pyramid geometry in math, mummification science experiments, and Egyptian art projects.

Portfolio Assessment

A method of evaluating a student's progress by collecting samples of their work over time, including writing assignments, projects, test results, and teacher observations, rather than relying solely on standardized tests.

Example: At the end of the school year, a homeschooling parent compiles a portfolio containing their child's best essays, science experiment logs, math worksheets, reading list, and photos of hands-on projects for review by a certified evaluator.

More terms are available in the glossary.

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Concept Map

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Worked Example

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Adaptive Practice

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Small steps add up.

What you get while practicing:

  • Math Lens cues for what to look for and what to ignore.
  • Progressive hints (direction, rule, then apply).
  • Targeted feedback when a common misconception appears.

Teach It Back

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