๐Ÿ“– Academic Support ๐Ÿ  Homeschool Guidance ๐ŸŽจ Enrichment
My Homeroom โ€” Charlotte, NC

Homeschooling that feels
supported and structured.

Whether you are brand new to homeschooling or need a more consistent rhythm, My Homeroom connects you with experienced educators who help make home learning feel manageable, meaningful, and sustainable.

What We Help With
Building a consistent daily structure
Choosing and using the right curriculum
Teaching subjects outside your comfort zone
Co-teaching alongside the parent
Meeting NC homeschool requirements
Supporting multiple children at different levels
Planning for high school and college readiness

Homeschooling is deeply personal. So is our support.

Some families homeschool by choice โ€” for religious reasons, for lifestyle flexibility, or because they believe deeply in a more individualized approach to education. Others come to homeschooling unexpectedly, pulled by a child who was struggling in a traditional setting or by circumstances that made school at home the right answer.

Whatever brought you here, the challenges are often the same โ€” finding structure that works for your family, covering the right material, staying consistent, and knowing whether your child is truly progressing. My Homeroom's homeschool educators understand all of it.

Our educators do not teach at families. They come alongside them โ€” working with the parent as a partner, not replacing their role, but filling in the gaps where support is most needed.

We work within your family's philosophy.

Traditional / Structured
Textbook and curriculum-based learning

If your family uses a structured curriculum like Sonlight, Abeka, Bob Jones, or Saxon Math, our educators can step in to teach specific subjects, check comprehension, grade work, and keep the pacing on track.

SonlightSaxon MathAbekaBob Jones
Classical / Charlotte Mason
Literature-rich, living book approach

Families using the Classical Conversations model, Well-Trained Mind, or Charlotte Mason methods benefit from educators who understand narration, copywork, nature study, and the value of primary sources over textbooks.

Classical ConversationsCharlotte MasonWell-Trained Mind
Eclectic / Relaxed
Mix-and-match or interest-led learning

Many Charlotte families piece together their own approach โ€” some structured, some interest-led, some project-based. Our educators are flexible and can support whatever combination works best for your children and your household.

Interest-ledProject-basedUnschool-adjacent

What homeschool guidance looks like at every stage

Early Homeschool Years
Grades K โ€” 3
Building daily learning rhythms that stick
Teaching phonics, reading, and early math alongside the parent
Helping the parent understand how to present material
Creating a weekly schedule that is realistic for your household
Making learning playful without losing structure
Elementary Homeschool
Grades 4 โ€” 6
Teaching specific subjects the parent finds challenging
Introducing writing structure and research skills
Keeping pace with grade-level expectations
Curriculum consultation โ€” what is and is not working
Preparing for the transition to middle school material
Middle & High School
Grades 7 โ€” 12
Teaching advanced subjects outside the parent's expertise
Building a transcript and credit system for high school
College-prep planning and dual enrollment guidance
Standardized test preparation and documentation
Ensuring NC homeschool annual testing requirements are met

What a real homeschool guidance session looks like

New Family ยท Curriculum Consultation
Building the Foundation โ€” First Session

The educator meets with both parent and child to review the family's goals, the child's current level, and the parent's available time and comfort with teaching. Together they review two or three curriculum options, discuss what a realistic daily schedule looks like, and leave with a clear starting plan. The parent receives a written summary by email.

Duration: 90 minutes
Participants: Parent and child
Goal: Clear curriculum plan and daily schedule
Grade 4 ยท Co-Teaching Session
Teaching Alongside the Parent

The parent is present and learning as the educator teaches a new math concept to their child. The educator models how to introduce the topic, how to check for understanding, and how to practice. The parent observes and takes notes so they can continue the instruction independently the next day. This is not tutoring โ€” it is teaching the teacher.

Duration: 75 minutes
Participants: Parent and child
Goal: Build the parent's confidence to teach independently
Grade 9 ยท High School Planning
Building a High School Transcript

The educator helps the parent understand how to structure four years of high school homeschool into a formal transcript โ€” which subjects count for which credits, how to document grades, how dual enrollment works at Central Piedmont Community College, and what colleges expect from homeschool applicants. The family leaves with a four-year course plan.

Duration: 90 minutes
Participants: Parent (student optional)
Goal: Complete 4-year academic plan and transcript template
Multiple Children ยท Routine Session
Rotating Through Three Grade Levels

The educator spends 25 minutes with each of three children at different grade levels โ€” starting with the youngest on phonics while the older two work independently, then moving to the middle child for math, then the oldest for writing feedback. The parent oversees the household flow. The educator leaves a brief written summary of each child's work.

Duration: 90 minutes
Participants: Educator, 3 children, parent
Goal: Meaningful individual time with each child

A sample homeschool week โ€” two children

Sample Family ยท Two Children: Grade 2 and Grade 6 ยท My Homeroom Educator 3x/week
Role
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
My Homeroom
Both children
9โ€“10:30am
Both children
9โ€“10:30am
Both children
9โ€“10:30am
Parent-led
Afternoon subjects
Full day parent-led
Afternoon subjects
Full day parent-led
Light / projects

On My Homeroom session days, the educator handles the two most challenging subjects for each child. The parent builds on those lessons independently on the other days.

Starting is easier than you might think.

1

Submit your intake form

Tell us about your children, your current homeschool setup (or that you are just starting), what is working and what is not, and what kind of help would make the biggest difference.

2

We review your family's situation

Homeschool families often need a more consultative first conversation. We read your intake form carefully and match you with an educator who has experience with your specific situation โ€” not just any homeschool educator.

3

A planning conversation

Most homeschool guidance engagements begin with a 60โ€“90 minute planning session โ€” the educator, the parent, and often the children together โ€” to understand the household and build a real plan before regular sessions begin.

4

Regular sessions begin

With a plan in place, regular sessions start. Frequency varies โ€” most homeschool families find 2โ€“3 sessions per week provides the right balance of support and independence. We adjust as you go.

Find the right homeschool support for your family

Tell us about your family and we will take it from there. Every response is read personally โ€” we respond within one business day.

Submit Your Intake Form โ†’ Back to Home