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That’s OK! Not every schoolteacher teaches every subject. For the elementary grades, textbooks with teacher’s guides will give you the structure and the teaching tools that you need to teach subjects you’re unfamiliar with.

When your child reaches high school, you can call on subject specialists to help you out! Think about reaching out to your friends, family, faith community, homeschool groups, local networks, and online communities to for help with tutoring your teen, grading essays, or answering questions. You can also have your high schooler take outside courses at a co-op, community college, or online.

For an added boost to your confidence, keep in mind that homeschooling melds two of the strongest predictors of academic achievement: parental involvement and one-on-one learning.

First, you might be surprised to discover that the typical homeschool day—especially for elementary-aged children—takes a lot less time than it does in a traditional school setting.

But your instinct to consider the time commitment is right on. Homeschooling is a big investment for you as a parent. It involves taking full responsibility for your child’s education—planning out their school year and field trips, arranging for testing or other assessments, recordkeeping, figuring out what parts you will teach and what parts you might delegate to a tutor, a co-op, another parent, or an online or local course, etc.

And you’re already wearing a lot of hats—that’s true, too! Homeschooling is incredibly flexible—that gives you the beautiful opportunity to completely customize your homeschool schedule around your child’s learning pace and interests, your family’s calendar, and unique learning opportunities.

There are several factors to keep in mind when answering this question.

The typical homeschool day—especially for elementary-age children—takes a lot less time than it does in a traditional school setting because of the concentrated, one-on-one instruction that you can give your children.

Homeschooling is also incredibly flexible, which gives you the opportunity to customize your homeschool schedule. You can organize your homeschool day (and week!) around your child’s learning pace, your family’s calendar, extracurricular activities, and even your work schedule.

However, homeschooling is still a big investment for you as a parent. It involves taking full responsibility for your child’s education—planning out their school year and field trips, arranging for testing or other assessments, recordkeeping, figuring out what subjects or lessons you will teach and which ones you might delegate to a tutor, a co-op, another parent, or an online or local course, and so on.

HSLDA is committed to helping you on your homeschool journey! Check out our free resources to help you start strong.
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What to Teach

VIDEO

Homeschool Reset: Mid-Year Strategies for Getting Started

Switching to homeschooling in the middle of the school year? This webinar is for you! From what subjects to teach, to setting up a daily schedule, to merging school and home life in this new journey called homeschooling, we’ve got you!
BLOG

Raising Brave Kids in a Broken World

Teach your children this simple truth: Hard things are real. But love and kindness are real, too. What you choose to do can make a difference.
BLOG

In Dark Days, We Homeschool With Hope

Parents across America are having conversations about evil and darkness and why horrible things happen to good people. Homeschooling gives us the opportunity to have those conversations first and to teach what matters most.
VIDEO

Curious About STEM and Homeschooling?

Want to spark inquiry, curiosity, and problem-solving in homeschool kids at any age? Try STEM: everyday science, resources, labs, FUN! Watch this webinar!
VIDEO

How to Choose or Change Your Homeschool Curriculum

How do I know what homeschool curriculum is right for my child and me? What if it isn’t working? When can I change? What does state law say? Watch this webinar!
COURT REPORT

Civics for High School Made Easy

COURT REPORT

Every Parent is a Teacher

No matter what career path you choose, you will always be a teacher, because that’s what parenting is.
COURT REPORT

Fighting for What Matters: The Forgotten Beauty of Freedom

COURT REPORT

The Lost Art of Teaching Winsome Speech

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