For diagnosis-specific planning

Use the autism, ADHD, and dyslexia guides when a diagnosis or learning profile strongly shapes the day.

For school transition questions

Use the IEP transition, state rules, and accommodations guides before changing enrollment or services.

For daily operations

Use the curriculum, daily schedule, progress tracking, and therapy/services guides to keep the plan practical.

Decision checkpoints for parents

Before changing curriculum, services, or daily expectations, write down the child’s current barrier, the support you are testing, how long you will try it, and what evidence would show that it helped. This keeps the homeschool plan child-centered instead of reactive. It also gives parents a calmer way to talk with tutors, therapists, evaluators, funding programs, and future school teams.

  • What need is this plan solving: access, regulation, reading, attention, communication, behavior, motor skills, anxiety, or independence?
  • What accommodation or teaching change will you test first?
  • What work sample, observation, provider note, or progress marker will you keep?
  • When will you review the plan before buying more materials or adding more appointments?

Records to keep with this plan

Special needs homeschooling works better when parents keep a simple evidence trail. Save dated work samples, accommodation notes, therapy or tutoring summaries, behavior and regulation patterns, reading or math progress notes, and copies of official documents. The record does not need to be complicated; it needs to be consistent enough to explain what the child needed, what you tried, and what changed over time.

Official checks before you act

Because homeschool law, special education services, and funding rules vary, verify requirements with your state education department, local district, official ESA or scholarship program, and qualified providers. Keep screenshots or PDFs of official guidance with your records.

Frequently asked questions

Can I homeschool a child with special needs?

In many places, parents can homeschool a child with special needs, but requirements vary by state and by funding program. Families should confirm state homeschool rules, keep strong records, and decide how therapies, evaluations, accommodations, and progress documentation will be handled before leaving a school placement.

Does homeschooling replace an IEP?

A homeschool plan is not the same thing as a public-school IEP. Some services may change when a child leaves public school. Parents should keep copies of the IEP, evaluations, accommodations, service logs, work samples, and progress notes so future school, provider, or funding conversations are easier.

Where should I start on this site?

If you are deciding whether to homeschool, start with Start Here. If you already homeschool, start with the page that names the hardest current barrier.