The best withdrawal resource for active-duty families PCSing to Dover Air Force Base who need to register on EdAccess and execute a clean Delaware homeschool withdrawal fast.
The exact EdAccess registration sequence and withdrawal process to pull your child from a Delaware school mid-year without triggering truancy. Step-by-step for emergency situations.
The best withdrawal resource for Delaware parents of children with IEPs or 504 Plans who need to protect IDEA funding under Senate Bill 106 while exiting through EdAccess.
Public schools genuinely do some things better than most home educators can replicate. Knowing what those things are — and what they are not — helps families make a clear-eyed decision rather than an ideological one.
Delaware's small size and tight-knit homeschool community make co-ops surprisingly easy to launch. Here's a practical guide to starting one — from finding families to handling liability to what the state requires.
The best alternatives to HSLDA membership and DHEA for withdrawing your child to homeschool in Delaware — from free resources to Delaware-specific guides.
Comparing a Delaware-specific withdrawal guide to an HSLDA membership for parents withdrawing to homeschool. When the $150/year membership is worth it and when a one-time guide is enough.
Switching to homeschool in Delaware is simpler than most parents expect — no approval required. Here's the exact withdrawal process, what notifications to file, and how to avoid a truancy flag.
Delaware homeschoolers are barred from public school sports under DIAA rules — and Delaware has no Tim Tebow law. Here's what your options actually are.
Delaware homeschoolers have no state-mandated end-of-year testing. Learn what you're actually required to do, what optional testing looks like, and how to document progress without a test.
Ready to start homeschooling in Delaware? Here's the step-by-step process: EdAccess registration, district withdrawal, required subjects, and what you don't have to do.
Delaware has no Equal Access law, which limits NHS participation for homeschoolers. Here's what options actually exist and what carries equal weight with college admissions offices.
Delaware's homeschool notice of intent goes through the EdAccess portal, not a paper form. Here's exactly what to file, when to file it, and what happens if you skip a step.
Homeschooling rates vary dramatically by state — from under 2% to over 12%. Here's a breakdown of homeschool percentages by state and what the data actually tells us.
Delaware gives high school homeschoolers significant freedom — but the choices you make in grades 9–12 directly affect college admissions and scholarship eligibility. Here's what to plan for.
Newark Charter School has a long waitlist and a reputation for academic pressure. If you're withdrawing your child to homeschool in Delaware, here's exactly how the process works.
Local homeschool groups vary enormously in structure, focus, and commitment level. Here's how to find the ones worth joining — and how Delaware families can tap into a well-connected network.
Delaware's truancy law defines absences, triggers, and consequences. Here's how homeschoolers are affected, what the DSCYF involvement process looks like, and how to stay protected.
Delaware has no Equal Access law and DIAA prohibits home-educated students from public school sports. Here's what part-time homeschool actually looks like in Delaware and what options exist.
Delaware does not require a formal homeschool progress report — but here's why building one anyway protects your child's academic record and how to do it efficiently.
Delaware homeschoolers choose any curriculum they want — the state requires no approvals, no submissions, and no standardized testing. Here's how to use that freedom wisely.
Delaware requires 180 instructional days per year but prescribes almost nothing about how you track them. Here's what a compliant attendance log looks like and how to set one up in minutes.
Delaware families leaving charter schools face a two-step withdrawal process before homeschooling is legal. Here's how the exit works and what Delaware's low-regulation law allows once you're out.
Received a truancy letter in Delaware while homeschooling? Here's what the law actually says, why letters still arrive, and the exact steps to shut them down fast.
Delaware's homeschool law is one of the least restrictive in the US. Here's what that means in practice — and the real benefits Delaware families gain when they make the switch.
Hybrid homeschooling in Delaware blends home instruction with outside classes. Here's how families structure it, what the law allows, and what to watch for.
Delaware doesn't use the word 'affidavit' — but the notification you file to start homeschooling is just as legally binding. Here's exactly what Delaware requires, where to send it, and what happens next.
Thinking about homeschooling in Delaware? Here's what the state requires, how to register, what you can teach, and how to connect with Delaware's homeschool community.
In Delaware, three unexcused absences trigger a truancy referral to DSCYF. Here's exactly how truancy law intersects with homeschooling — and how proper withdrawal eliminates the risk.
Delaware requires two notifications to legally start homeschooling — not one. Here's exactly how the EdAccess submission and district notification work, and what to do when things go sideways.
Delaware doesn't require standardized testing or portfolio reviews — but colleges and scholarships still expect a solid transcript. Here's how to build one that works.
Delaware's homeschool laws are among the least restrictive in the country. Here's exactly what the state requires — and what it deliberately leaves up to you.
Finding a homeschool community in Delaware is easier than most families expect. Here are the active networks, co-ops, and support groups across New Castle, Kent, and Sussex counties.
Delaware doesn't have a homeschool ESA or voucher program — but there are still real funding sources available to Delaware homeschool families. Here's what to look for.
Delaware homeschool parents issue their own diplomas — no state approval required. Here's how to create a legally sound diploma and transcript, what colleges expect, and how SEED and Inspire scholarships fit in.
Delaware homeschool parents issue their own diplomas — there's no state approval required. Here's what makes a Delaware homeschool diploma credible and how colleges and employers treat it.