11 April 2019
Transcripts Made Easy: The Homeschooler's Guide to High-School Paperwork Review
April 11, 2019
What is the one area that seems to panic most homeschool moms and bring
trepidation when they think of homeschooling their children in high school-its
transcripts and record keeping! I have to agree that it is a bit daunting as
this is their end game and what we do now really does matter. I was thrilled to
learn more with Transcripts Made Easy: The Homeschooler's Guide to High-School Paperwork from Everyday Education.
I received a digital version of Transcripts Made Easy: The Homeschooler's
Guide to High-School Paperwork. This is the fourth edition of this book which
was first published in 2001.
This is available as a digital download or you can purchase a physical copy of the book. The author Janice Campbell is a homeschool mom who homeschooled her four sons from pre-school through high school. I love the fact that she has been in the homeschool trenches and is now helping others navigate all the necessities involved in high school.
This is available as a digital download or you can purchase a physical copy of the book. The author Janice Campbell is a homeschool mom who homeschooled her four sons from pre-school through high school. I love the fact that she has been in the homeschool trenches and is now helping others navigate all the necessities involved in high school.
Transcripts Made Easy: The Homeschooler's Guide to High-School Paperwork
comes as a PDF file format. There are 138 pages and 6 Parts covered in this e Book. Each section is broken down in smaller sub topics.
comes as a PDF file format. There are 138 pages and 6 Parts covered in this e Book. Each section is broken down in smaller sub topics.
This is great resource if you preparing for high school, in the middle of their
high school, or scrambling to graduate them this year and haven’t even started
a transcript. She tells you where you should start in this book. Even if you
are looking at graduating really soon and need a quick fix. This e Book is great for every season you are
in with your high schooler.
Part 1: Meet the Transcript:
A good overview of what a transcript is and who needs a transcript. It explains that every high school student
should have a transcript whether they are planning on going straight into the
workforce, military, trade school or college. What we do with our children’s
high school records and transcript really does matter. We don’t know if as an adult they may
want to go to college or go another path.
It explains what the three basic parts of what should be included on a transcript:
Identity, Basic information, and Course Record. From there it breaks the three
parts down even further. I love the straight forward information. It’s easy
to understand, not wordy but straight to the point.
I really appreciated the details included and a few hints. The author even
points out some information is optional and may depend on what your student is
planning on doing and may vary by colleges.
Where do I start and when should I be doing such and such.
She gives you a plan to execute the whole paper work, record keeping and then
to the transcript starting from the beginning.
Part 2: Plan with the End in Mind
Now that I have a high school and middle school student that question, “What
do you want to be when you grow up?” isn’t so cute as it is was when my kids
where younger. Now my brain starts to create list! This part gives you an
overview of planning from subjects to study, credits needed, College alternative
requirements, and NCAA eligibility.
There is a sample showing you the differences of a standard diploma and a
college prep graduation requirements.
If you're wondering what skills they need to succeed in all career paths the
book explain what skills you should prepare for and gives you several resource
options to look into. Everything from communication skills, writing basics,
citations, research skills, organizational and time management skills, and test
taking.
There is a section for scheduling it in six different formats from on
subject plan to year around schooling. There’s a sample page of what a four-year
College bound student should look like.
What about the standardized test. There is a list of several test, when
they should be taken, what each one is for, achievement test information, and
GED information.
I like that she looks at this as a mom and helps use to remind our kids the
reality of the world outside of home and that it won’t be fair and we need to
prepare our kids before they graduate school from a mom’s deadline to a real
world deadline and many other reminders of real world life skills that we may
have not considered.
My favorite section is the section on College alternatives everything from
skilled trades, entrepreneurship, apprenticeships, military, and even guilds.
Then she list so many wonderful resources that I wouldn’t have even know about.
I plan on researching this area in the near future at depth.
One are that caught my attention is with my daughter and her honey and lip
balm business. It reminded me that I need to put that in her transcripts and
the resources we used. I mean she started this almost 5 years ago and it’s been
very educational for her.
Part 3: Keep Simple Records
She breaks down creating a high school binder, what work samples from
school you need to keep, and other forms and paper work you should keep.
How do you record unit studies and how to name classes from basic to
advance subjects? I never thought about that before so I have to put more
thought in this area.
Finally, a high school planning book that gives you more than just a
sentence blurb with a child with special needs! Five pages that answer
questions: if you need a transcript, college, test taking, and what’s the
difference between an SEP and IEP. She recommends resources for you to read and
plan. I have one of the books that I have forgotten about and need to pull
it out to revisit it.
Part 4: Grades, Credits, and the GPA
How should you grade your own kids realistically and even ethically? She
has a lot of information here to read on grading a written assignment and even
includes a grading rubrics.
How do you grade if your school style is an uncschooler or chronically
relaxed? She expounds on that if you need help there.
A grading scale is included, how to grant credit, granting credit for
honor, AP, Dual Credit, and so on. There is even a section how to figure out a
GPA. If you’re not great at math she points you to a free GPA Calculator site.
Part 5: Create the Transcript
Now you’re ready to create your own transcripts. There are a few tips to
making it look professional. Something I never thought about is how to issue an
official transcript. There are a few suggestions about how to not create a
transcript yourself. Also included are some helpful information about community
colleges.
She offers several transcript formats that you can create yourself with
step by step instructions on how to make a transcript on a computer.
This is just one example of a transcript
There are also several examples of how a completed transcript should look.
Part 6: References, Resources, and Reproducibles:
You may have already heard terms like DSST, FAFSA, AP, CLEP, and other
terminology. There is a glossary that helps you know what all those common
words and acronyms that are associated with high school and college. I
appreciated this section as I have heard most of them but, a few I didn’t fully
grasp what it really means.
Included is a section that list websites for resources for teaching your
student, recommended books for you as a homeschool parent, and even a section
for special needs (that part caught my attention).
She also lists several testing resources like ACT, CLT, and other testing links
to help prepare your high school student. There is even a Personality/Aptitude
assessment link that is free to help with planning for college major or career
searching.
This section also has a plethora of forms so you don’t have to create your
own layout. There is a reading log, activities log, class, profile.
There are several subject worksheets: English, math, history, science,
social studies, religion & philosophy, foreign language, arts (2), PE,
electives, and a blank form. This is a nice approach of keeping track of each
subject instead of having them all grouped together. It has everything in the
forms for when you transfer the information to your transcript. It has a
section for units earned, course/book, date, grade, test scores, and a space
for comments. I really never thought of doing it like this and this is
something I might do with my son.
There are different styles of blank transcript forms. She gives you a few
tips like if you’re doing more than one page you should number your pages 1/3,
2/3, and so on.
What I Would Love as a Feature in this?
What I Would Love as a Feature in this?
I would love to see a downloadable EDITABLE PDF for all of her forms. I
would be willing to pay extra for that feature. Yea, I know I can create it myself but, life is so busy and it would be
an amazing option for the homeschool mom to have ready to fill out.
How did I use Transcripts Made Easy: The Homeschooler's Guide to
High-School Paperwork?
After I downloaded the book and skimmed over the e book. I decided to print
all 138 pages. I wanted to highlight parts and write myself notes throughout on
the pages that I needed.
I decided to print this out and put it in a binder.
I currently have a special needs 10th grader and a 7th
grade son. Both of their transcripts and records are going to be completely
different in many ways.
There is so much helpful information that I have highlighted several areas. This section talks about preparing our kids for the real world and real deadlines and not mom's deadlines.
My 10th grader daughter has special needs and we don’t foresee
her going to college due to her academic level. We are still exploring options
for her once she graduates. I want to be prepared for wherever God leads her
and want to lay out her transcript for several possibilities.
I'm going to revisited the recommended book for writing her up a SEP.
I was glad to see the micro-buisness information and I will be adding this into my daughter's transcript.
I plan on cleaning up her transcript and changing the title of the
subjects. I’m going to add in Entrepreneurship 101 to it with her micro- business.
My son will be in 8th grade next year and we have already been trying
to map out his high school classes. Most likely he is college bound but, we are
very open to other options. Now I feel I have a lot more information to make
him a good transcript.
I really liked the individual subject worksheets and I'm considering on utilizing them
with my son.
I know I will be revisiting Transcripts Made Easy: The Homeschooler's Guide
to High-School Paperwork many times over in the coming years. I really appreciate all the hardwork and
research that went into this.
I feel so much more at ease and less stressed about paper work and transcripts now.
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I am 1 of 50 other homeschoolers who have been reviewing Transcripts Made Easy: The Homeschooler's Guide to High-School Paperwork from Everyday Education. Click on the banner to see what they think too.
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