Most North Dakota homeschool parents don't have a teaching certificate. Here's exactly how the non-certified track works — filing, testing, the 50th percentile rule, and remediation.
A withdrawal guide costs under $25. An education attorney in Fargo costs $200-$350/hour. Here's how to decide which one your North Dakota homeschool situation actually requires.
PCSing to North Dakota and need to set up homeschool fast? Compare HSLDA, NDHSA, base School Liaison, and state-specific guides for Minot and Grand Forks AFB families.
Withdrawing a child with an IEP from school in North Dakota triggers IDEA consent revocation and Student Services Plan requirements. Here's which resource handles it best.
HSLDA costs $150/year and NDHSA $45/year for North Dakota withdrawal guidance. Here are lower-cost alternatives that handle the two-track system without a recurring subscription.
How to switch to homeschool mid-year in North Dakota without triggering truancy, including the 5-day waiting period, grading records, and the Statement of Intent timeline.
Scored below the 50th percentile on ND homeschool testing? Learn what monitored status means, your options, and how to protect your right to homeschool.
Complete guide to ND homeschool standardized testing: which grades, 50th percentile rule, proctor requirements, test options, and what happens if scores fall short.
Score below the 30th percentile in ND homeschool testing? The law requires a formal remediation plan. Here's what it must include and what happens if you skip it.
ND homeschool law creates three parent qualification tracks. Learn whether you need a teaching license, degree, or just a HS diploma — and what each track requires.
Homeschooling on North Dakota reservations: how Standing Rock, Turtle Mountain, Fort Berthold, and Spirit Lake families navigate tribal and state education requirements.
Military families at Minot AFB and Grand Forks AFB: how to homeschool in North Dakota after a PCS move, file your Statement of Intent, and use base resources.
North Dakota homeschoolers have a legal right to join public school sports via NDCC §15.1-23-16. Here's exactly how eligibility, physicals, and sign-up work.
ND monitored homeschool status is triggered two ways: no high school diploma, or test scores below the 50th percentile. Here is exactly what it means and how to get out.
Homeschooling in Williston, Watford City, and the Bakken oil patch: ND filing requirements, local co-ops, and how to stay compliant during frequent relocations.
Practical guide to homeschooling a child with ADHD or autism in North Dakota — legal requirements, services plan filing, and how to make the transition work.