How to manage Vermont homeschool documentation when you have children on both sides of the age-13 subject threshold — the tracking systems that handle it and those that don't.
What Vermont homeschoolers need to document for Act 77 dual enrollment at CCV and Vermont State — and why generic transcript tools don't cover the full requirement.
What Vermont homeschool families need when returning to public school — grade placement evidence, portfolio records, and how to handle a transfer mid-year or at high school entry.
Comparing Homeschool Tracker's $96/year SaaS platform with one-time PDF templates for Vermont-specific documentation — cost, features, and which format suits your family.
Comparing Vermont's free AOE Parent Report PowerPoint with paid portfolio templates — what each includes, where the free forms fall short, and when paying makes sense.
Why generic Etsy homeschool planners fail Vermont's specific EOYA requirements — and what Vermont families should use instead for MCOS, portfolio, and assessment documentation.
The best documentation tools for Vermont families in their first year of homeschooling — what Act 36 requires you to maintain, which systems work, and what to avoid.
Vermont's integration law (16 V.S.A. § 563(24)) gives homeschoolers the right to take public school courses, use facilities, and join extracurriculars. Here's how.
Comparing Vermont's parent report portfolio and standardized testing EOYA options side by side — cost, effort, documentation, and when each approach makes more sense.
What Vermont's parent report EOYA must contain, what 'four work samples' actually means, and how to write the narrative section for every MCOS subject.
Vermont-specific attendance log, daily log, curriculum tracker, and lesson planner templates for tracking 175 instructional days and MCOS compliance under Act 66.
Vermont homeschoolers can complete senior year at CCV or VTSU tuition-free through the Early College Program under Act 77's Flexible Pathways Initiative.
What Vermont homeschool work samples count for the EOYA parent report, how to organize a binder, digital vs. physical options, and elementary examples.
How to create a Vermont homeschool transcript that colleges accept — format, required fields, GPA calculation, and what UVM and Champlain actually want.
How to calculate GPA, assign credit hours, and write course descriptions for a Vermont homeschool high school transcript — the mechanics every parent needs to know.
Which standardized tests satisfy Vermont's EOYA requirement, how to order and administer the CAT or Iowa test at home, and what scores you need to keep.
How Vermont homeschoolers qualify for public school athletics under VPA rules, what documentation is required, and how the integration law protects your access.
How Vermont homeschool parents document special needs — the IPE form, ADHD records, dyslexia portfolios, and curriculum adaptation attestations under Act 66.
How Vermont homeschoolers prepare for college — from building transcripts to using free dual enrollment credits under Act 77 — without scrambling in senior year.
Middlebury is highly selective and has specific requirements for homeschooled applicants. Here's what they ask for and how to build a competitive application.
Champlain College requires a parent transcript, course descriptions, and a 2.5 GPA recommendation. Here's exactly what to prepare as a Vermont homeschooler.
Vermont doesn't issue diplomas to homeschoolers — parents do. Here's how to set graduation requirements, issue a diploma, and make it count for college.
How Vermont unschoolers build a compliant EOYA portfolio — mapping child-led projects to MCOS subjects, nature-based learning documentation, and the 175-day requirement.