Contact the department of education for your state. Call or visit the website.
Look for “home schooling” once you are on the state department of education site. If you have difficulty finding specific information, call the state office and ask for assistance personally.
Carefully read through the basic requirements for home school certification. Some states, such as Mississippi, require no certification, while in California, for example, only certified teachers can home school their children.
Decide if taking specific actions, such as increasing the number of college hours you have accumulated, taking a particular course (one on your state history, for example) or fulfilling other requirements, are steps you are willing to take in order to qualify for home schooling certification. Before enrolling in any course, make sure that it will specifically apply to the certification guidelines.
Follow the guidelines given by the state for home schooling as far as how many hours of instruction must be provided and how those hours are to be broken down. For example, the state of Missouri requires the following: “1,000 hours of instruction during the school year, with at least 600 hours in the basics, which will be in reading, language arts, mathematics, social studies, and science.”
Pay close attention to the kinds of records parents who home school their children must keep. Those records might consist of lesson plans, samples of student work, grades given and how they were justified, and other information.
Find out if students in home school programs must take standardized tests in order to receive certificates of achievement. If so, make sure you are clear about how those tests will be administered.