February 4, 2009

Homeschooling and College Scholarships

Ah, another question!

Kimber said...

I've been homeschooling since my 19 year old was about 4... We have graduated him now. I also have a 15, 12, 9 and 7. So my work is not done.

I am interested how you got a full ride (or any) scholarship. Again, I'm new to your blog. If you've already addressed this question, could you just direct me that way.

college scholarships for homeschoolersPeter did most of the leg work on his scholarship. He read through collegeboard.com and princetonreview.com, researching everything related to getting into college. He got some mail from Questbridge about scholarships, and over time, realized this was really a pretty good deal. So we jumped through all their hoops and he ended up getting a full ride to the University of Chicago. They needed a transcript and a record of his extra curricular activities, so I created those documents and have attached them below for you to use as you please. They also asked us to describe our schooling, get recommendations and have Peter write a couple essays. Their deadline is around the end of August at the beginning of a students senior year.

All in all, I found that being a home schooler applying to college can be an advantage. We don't fit the mold, so we have to explain more and that makes the child more real to the admissions officer. They are forced to look closely at this student as a human being, not just as a class rank, GPA, or test score. As a matter of fact, on Peter's transcript, his grades were all "Pass." He believed that letter grades were not applicable to him. Well, OK. So I explained our Pass/Fail philosophy and he still got the scholarship.

We wrote his transcript in hindsight--that means we looked at all the things he was doing and gave each one a name and a place on the transcript. For example, he listened to a class online at UC Berkley and read the textbook. That became a high school class. If he read a bunch of books on a particular topic, that became a class. He participated in local theater and that became his drama class. Working out at the gym can be PE. It all translates. You should do this at the end of every semester, starting in 9th grade, otherwise you forget and it's practically impossible to create an accurate transcript a few years later (unless you've kept good notes all along).

I assigned each semester "class" a credit based on how our local high school does it. They give one credit for each completed semester class. You can look at credits two ways: time spent or content covered. If you look at it as time spent, that's 50 minutes a day, five days a week. But then take into account how much direct instruction takes place in a 50 minute class and in reality, it's a lot less. If you look at earning credit as content covered, a child can complete a semester's worth of coursework in a few weeks--summer school accelerated classes prove that.

Some colleges ask to see a homeschooler's reading list or textbook list. That can be tricky if you don't have a textbook type of high school. If you just love this college, talk to an admissions counselor about your unique situation and try to arrange an interview with your child. If they really want you, they'll work with you.

If your child excels at something, play that up. For Peter, it was his test scores and braininess (is that a word?). For Meg, it will be her theater talent. We'll apply to schools that value an acting resume and give scholarships in that area. We might even have her start at a community college. They are generally much cheaper and have very basic admissions requirements. Ours only requires a GED score for home schoolers. From there, a student can easily transfer to an upper level school with fewer questions about high school because they will already have a college background. And I know there are scholarships for transfer students, but I haven't explored that area yet.

The Home School Legal Defense Association has a useful page for homeschooling high school. There are a lot of links on all aspects of high school and preparing for college.

Hope that helps, and thanks for the question!

Relate Posts:

Bring College Into Your Home School

Here are the forms I mentioned. If you want to print one, click on the iPaper icon for choices. You may notice that the extra curricular form is basically the same as the transcript. The different sized boxes are due to me deleting Peter's activities and not knowing how to remake the form. But I'm sure you get the idea. You can remake the forms on any spreadsheet. I just discovered Scribd.com--makes uploading documents like this a snap. Hurray, a new toy!

Home School High School Transcript


High School Extracurricular Activities Template

9 comments:

topsytechie said...

This falls under my category: "things I will need to research sooner than I think", so THANK YOU for the good info!!

Cathy said...

This is perfect. A homeschooler was just telling me she has some concerns about college acceptance for homeschoolers and I told her to check out your blog. Perfect timing and such valuable information.

My Journey so Far... said...

Great information. As always you are such a help to us homeschooling moms that wonder how it will all come together.

Gayle said...

Thanks for shainrg this information. I'll be needing it in the next few years and have already been thinking about it.

All I need to do when the time comes is to go through your archives!

The Stone Age Techie said...

Great post! I'm going to link to this one, and that way when anyone smugly asks, 'well, how will they get into college?' I will be able to refer them to you!
Karen

Christa sterken said...

Great information, I am going to post a link to your blog on mine..is that alright?

Christa

DeLynn said...

This is a goldmine. Thank you for all the invaluable information. Also it is nice to hear about your son who did not write. Mine is 11 and hasn't written much, which makes my husband a little nervous. He is quite a reader though so this gives me hope for our future.

HomeSchoolCollegeCounselor said...

A reading list isn't a bad idea to keep track of, just in case the university asks for one. Pretty simple to track, just have your student keep a running list in a notebook or computer spreadsheet listing each book read by title and author. Piece of cake!

The Reluctant Homeschooler said...

Thanks for putting all that valuable information up for all to see and use. Very useful!

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