High School Credit for College Scholarship Applications

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High School Credit for College Scholarship Applications Much of the work your high school student does in pursuit of college scholarships--essays, projects, etc.--can and should be counted towards high school credit on their transcripts. The typical high school junior or senior can spend hours and hours on scholarship applications, so they deserve to receive some credit for that work. All of the essays or other work that your student produces should be saved in print form, but as much as possible, save it on your computer as well. Have a file on your desktop titled ‘scholarships’ or ‘schoolwork,’ and save their work there. You’ll be able to use those same essays later on, for different purposes. Whenever they accrue 120-180 hours of work, they should earn a credit. If they’re writing essays for about one hour a day as well as reading for them, you can count that as a whole English credit. Instead of an English credit, they may earn credit for a specialized course. For example, if your student really loves a particular subject, say economics, and they fill up application essay after application essay on economics, then they may have a whole credit of economics. For scholarships which require photography or artwork of some kind, your student may accrue quite a few art hours, which you can incorporate into an art class. Sometimes homeschoolers forget that photography is actually an art. It was an art class at my public high school. If you have a very techy sort of student, they can get art credit through photography, because most photography now is digital, which really appeals to the techy sort of student. Add those hours together and incorporate them into your student’s homeschooling curriculum. Determine grades for these hours the regular way: evaluate what they did and determine grading criteria for each paper or project they worked on. Each essay might also get a grade for completion or research. Some papers that my children produced didn’t receive a very good grade, but were the ones that ended up getting the scholarships. If that happens to you, you might want to go back and give your student an A for that paper, because somebody else has graded it and thought it was pretty good. If your student wins something with their work, make sure that you give it an A. In addition to including your child’s work as credit, make sure that you put anything they win on their activity or awards list. Even if they’re just mentioned as a commended student, include that on their awards list. Have a look at http://www.thehomescholar.com/ that provides you detailed information regarding homeschooling to assist you to homeschooling the children. For furthermore recommendations regarding home school education you can visit http://www.thehomescholar.com/homeschool-highschool-transcripts.php


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