tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-211037710310420513.post8203835439882590480..comments2023-05-08T07:47:13.584-07:00Comments on living, and loving learning: decisions...Debihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15429881953804634592noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-211037710310420513.post-56519486191086694422008-04-17T17:50:00.000-07:002008-04-17T17:50:00.000-07:00Dewey,Who knows if Annie will even be going off to...Dewey,<BR/>Who knows if Annie will even be going off to college early at this point...but as there is that chance (she's taking her first course at the community college in the fall), we're trying to cover our bases. Unfortunately, New York has this bizarre "preliminary education requirement" which one must meet before getting a college degree in New York. To meet this, you must have a high school diploma, a GED, or a letter from the superintendent of your district stating that you completed a high school education. For homeschoolers, the diploma is out. And to get a letter from the superintendent, you have to have filed all your high school paperwork (an individualized home instruction plan plus four quarterly reports for each of four years). There is the GED option, but it's not even guaranteed that you can get a waiver to take it before 17. Anyway, it seems to the opinion of most (including the admission officer we've been talking to at the community college), that if there's even a slight chance that she might finish up two years of community college by 15 or 16, we really should just skip her right now so the superintendent will get his four years of high school paperwork before then. <BR/>I have no idea if my explanation made any sense at all there. New York, along with Pennsylvania, are supposedly the most heavily regulated when it comes to homeschooling. And I'm sure I'm not the most eloquent when it comes to trying to explain them.Debihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15429881953804634592noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-211037710310420513.post-7413331146747915622008-04-11T15:28:00.000-07:002008-04-11T15:28:00.000-07:00So it sounds like you live in a state that has a l...So it sounds like you live in a state that has a lot of rules for homeschoolers. When we homeschooled, we were fortunately in a state that had NO regulations at all. I mean, fortunately for us. Not fortunately for my former student, who was taken out of school to homeschool, and it turned out she was really just babysitting full time for people from her weird, creepy church. If you could really call it a church. Anyway! So all we had to do was write a note to the school saying we were going to homeschool, and that's it! Sometimes you'd see homeschooled kids starting college at 13 or so. <BR/><BR/>But Jean has a point; a lot of the best colleges are actively recruiting homeschooled kids now. In my current state (different from the one I homeschooled in) I know a guy who homeschooled until he was 14, got National Merit Scholar status on his PSAT, and is now, at 18, graduating from college, with PILES of job and grad school offers!Deweyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00395712971920800717noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-211037710310420513.post-38342213064328785952008-03-31T06:22:00.000-07:002008-03-31T06:22:00.000-07:00Why would she have to finish high school if she's ...Why would she have to finish high school if she's gone through the community college? Colleges, even competitive ones, would likely not "require" her to have a high school diploma if she had done a comprehensive program of study at a community college, especially if that program had yielded an associate's degree. Of course, there are issued in sending someone off to college at an early age. Don was rejected by one that had told him at the interview stage that they had real issues about putting a 15-year-old into a dorm, that as a day student they would take him in a minute, but the dorm was the issue. As it turned out, he lived in the dorm here even though UVa said they would waive the dorm requirement because of his age. Anyway, my whole point is that I wouldn't take high school as a given. If she can succeed at the community college, think beyond high school. There are kids here who use community college to fulfill high school requirements their final two years. Would New York allow that? Do we need to do some brainstorming here?<BR/><BR/>And if you ever want to seriously look into PEG at Mary Baldwin College, well, it's not much more than 45 minutes door-to-door from me. If our Don had been a Donna, that's where he would have gone instead of high school.Jeanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00551547836073871713noreply@blogger.com