I just finished my son's homeschool portfolio for his application to SCAD. Included in it as a short syllabus from every course he's taken (or table of contents from the books he's used). A transcript, a reading list, a resume of activities and accomplishments, and a writing sample... probably his best essay to date.
He still has to submit his art portfolio in hopes of getting a scholarship and write his statement of purpose. I will mail it tomorrow, and am getting everything else submitted. We are hoping to have his application in by the end of Sept because I hear scholarships are first come, first served. We will apply to his second choice college in October. If we apply to others, it will be in November.
Feels good to have it done.
But it doesn't end there... getting my second child ready to take the PSAT in a month.
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He still has to submit his art portfolio in hopes of getting a scholarship and write his statement of purpose. I will mail it tomorrow, and am getting everything else submitted. We are hoping to have his application in by the end of Sept because I hear scholarships are first come, first served. We will apply to his second choice college in October. If we apply to others, it will be in November.
Feels good to have it done.
But it doesn't end there... getting my second child ready to take the PSAT in a month.
FREE HOME EDUCATION WEBSITE
MY BUSINESS WEBSITE
WalletPop Contributor
Brighthub Contributor
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The first step in my opinion is to dig through all of your books and materials for the last two years that you used. (hopefully you didn't sell anything. Also, collect all of her notebooks and misc stuff. Ask her to put all remnants of homeschool stuff for the last 2 or 3 years in a bin. From there, you can start to make sense of what she has accomplished and begin to categorize them into subjects.
Like I said, my son's portfolio consists mostly of syllabuses from classes he took in person and the table of contents of books he used. I put the grade he earned at the top of the page, and put notes at the bottom of the page, where necessary.