Will public schools give you a curriculum?
It depends on the rules in your area, as well as each situation. If you have registered as the homeschool teacher, most states do not allow the public schools to administer tests or curriculum to your students. They can only do this if the students are enrolled with them. Some public schools offer homeschooling programs, in which they provide the materials. However, in this case, you are not the one who makes the final rules and your children will still be technically in the public school program. If you prefer it that way, then go ahead and register in this type of program. But if you'd rather be responsible for all aspects of your child's education, you will need to seek the curriculum elsewhere or create it yourself.
Should the public schools give your child curriculum if you homeschool?
No. Unless your child is registered in a program with the public schools, they should not be involved in the educational aspects of your homeschool. Laws change all the time, so keep up to date with your local laws on homeschool. However, in most cases, public schools cannot and should not be distributing you any learning materials unless your children are registered as their students.
Why wouldn't I want to accept curriculum from the public schools?
It's not really a matter of whether you have the desire to accept the materials. But as the homeschool teacher, it is also your responsibility to abide by the law. By allowing teaching from someone not authorized as the homeschool teacher, you could be getting yourself and the school into trouble. If you would prefer they provide the curriculum, you need to either enroll your child in the public schools or in a home-based program with them. This ensures that you and the school are both abiding by the appropriate laws regarding the education. If you would like more control over your child's education, you need to take charge of the curriculum yourself.
Why won't the public schools give me the unused materials where my child left off?
In some states, it is actually against the rules for them to help you unless you are registered in a homeschooling program through the public schools. As the parent and homeschool teacher, all the responsibility is on you, unless your child is enrolled in a program that ieves that responsibility. The decision to homeschool is not one that should be taken lightly. By choosing to homeschool your children, you are choosing the responsibility of anything involved in their education. As such, you must make a decision on curriculum and many other things. In homeschool, no one does that for you - or anything else for that matter. That's right. It's all up to you and the public schools will likely not help much or at all.
Extra Homecshool Resources:
Homeschool Laws - http://www.hslda.org/laws/default.asp
Online Public Schools - http://www.k12.com/schools-programs/online-public-schools/
More Online Public Schools - http://distancelearn.about.com/od/onlinepublicschools/a/OnlinePS.htm
Curriculum Standards - http://www.corestandards.org/
More from Lyn:
Homeschool Tips: Can 'Free' Schooling or Unschooling Help My Child Succeed in Life?
Questions Kids May Have when Switching to Unschooling
Homeschool: Are You the Right Parent for the Job?
The Social Scene for Homeschooled Teens
Homeschool FAQ: Common Myths and Questions
Published by Y! Lyn - Community Advocate
Lyn Lomasi is the Community Advocate at Yahoo! Contributor Network. Email her with community issues & ideas (contributor-lyn@yahoo-inc.com). Read her tips for success on the official Yahoo! Contributor Netwo... View profile
- Public Schools and TechnologyPublic schools must keep abreast of new technology as their mission is to prepare students to be contributing, competent citizens.
The Transition from Homeschooling to the Regular Public School System: H...Making the transition from being homeschooled to a public school classroom can be challenging. It is important that parents prepare their children for this big change. Here ar...- Structural Violence in the Public School SystemThis research paper reviews the history of the modern school system and presents alternatives to public education.
- Public School Textbooks and the HomeschoolerPublic school textbooks have become a reason for homeschooling, at least in my book. My children are sure they are written by idiots. This is why.
- Georgia Virtual Academy: An Alternative to Traditional Public SchoolsThis is an article describing the Georgia Virtual Academy, an at-home school program accredited by the State of Georgia.
- Buying Guide to Home School Curriculum - Books, Arts and Crafts, Software, Cd's an...
- How To Find The Right Homeschool Curriculum for Your Family
- How to Stop Thinking in Terms of Public or Private School and Start Understanding...
- What Foods in Public Schools Contribute Most to Diet and Weight Loss Management?
- What Does a Public School Superintendent Do?
- The Bible in Public Schools: Constitutional or Unconstitutional?
- Home Schooled Girl Ordered to Attend Public School Over "Rigid Faith"





23 Comments
Post a CommentWhen I was a kid, I had school homework then my parents gave me more to do. I didn't always appreciate then, but now I do.
Amazing info Lyn! Thanks for sharing!
Great info!
I wondered how homeschooling worked. Great article, Lyn.
This sounds like very helpful information for home schooling families.
Good information.
Every school district can make its own decision. Most schools across the country don't have to help a parent whose homeschooling at all.
I suspect it's feast or famine as far as any cooperation local school districts will provide. Very good piece.
Lyn, it's a great responsibility to homeschool your kids, and did not realize it was so involved. Thanks for the info!
The only thing my sister ever did that I thought was actually credible was to home school her son. My Mom and Dad put in yoemans work on that one but it still worked out great. My nephew, although legally blind is more literate and well rounded than most of his peer group. He's 23 now.