Go Online For High School Be Prepared Or Drop Out!

Do you have what it takes to go to high school online? It is not for the faint of heart or the weak of spirit. It will be just as demanding, actually more demanding, than traditional high schools.

If I have not scared you off, here are six points that you need to reconcile before you make the attempt to be an online high school student:

  1. Being an online high school student is at least as difficult as being a traditional student and most find it more difficult. There are a number of reasons for this including you needing to be the primary motivator to get the work done (as opposed to the teacher).
  2. You need to choose the right model for you. If you know that you will need extra time to complete courses, do not choose a program that is semester-based. If you know that you need set deadlines in order to complete work, do not choose a program that has open-ended or far in the future deadlines.
  3. Choose a collaborative arrangement that works for you. If you work best in isolation, do not choose a program that requires group work. If you need the support of other students, do not choose a program that is primarily independent study.
  4. Choose a program that uses the type of media which works for you. If you need audio and video files, find the programs that offer those resources.
  5. If you are an adult and want to be in a program that focuses on adults, choose one. If you are a teen and do not want to be “in class” with adults, select a program that only allows the under-18 crowd.
  6. Commit to doing the work. The #1 reason for students failing to complete a program is a lack of commitment. You can do it. You need to decide that you will do it.

» Read more: Go Online For High School Be Prepared Or Drop Out!

Related posts

Homeschooling High School

The last four years of school could prove to be the most challenging for both student and parent alike especially if you are planning on homeschooling high school.  The course subjects will be getting much more difficult, teenagers are entering puberty, dating will commence and interpersonal relationships with other young adults will become more important to your student.

First, the curriculum.  If you’ve been homeschooling prior to this time, algebra has probably already been introduced to your student.  It will now get more technical and you will move onto geometry and perhaps calculus.  Many people loathe these subjects or will not feel comfortable teaching them.  Some homeschoolers hire tutors for these courses, send their kids to local colleges to take these courses there or use correspondence schools.

» Read more: Homeschooling High School

Related posts

Leaving a Private School? Consider Distance Learning

Schools can fail students just as much as a student can fail in school. Sometimes, for reasons ranging from teacher-student conflict, to issues with safety, a child simply does not “fit in” and succeed at a particular school. Most of the time, the solution often involves enrollment in a different school. What if the problem though is not the school, but the system and the approach in general? Parents often wrongly assume that paying for an education automatically translates to academic success.

What happens when the decision to attend private school backfires and a student does not succeed? Besides losing out on a significant amount of money, parents whose children have to transfer out of private school have to make a decision as to whether or not their child will now move on to public school, or find another alternative.

» Read more: Leaving a Private School? Consider Distance Learning

Related posts