@@mypracticallyimperfectlife That's Great ....what an achievement for you and your daughter.......we are in NY.., and trying to navigate the system.....as you expressed in your video.....its challenging. my daughter is a junior and we're reaching out to a local D1 college.... should be an interesting journey. Congratulations Again and best of luck.
Do you know what things would make the student ineligible? Does the choice of curriculum matter? Or if the student completed all the core subjects, have good grades, all the credits needed per their state plus a SAT score that meets their requierments, will they be eligible? Basically I'm asking do you know if they only accept certain curriculum? Thank you so much for this informative video.
From what I’ve learned in my research, the curriculum chosen doesn’t matter. It’s more about ensuring you’ve filled out the forms included in the NCAA homeschool packet as thoroughly as possible. I’ll actually be sharing an update in May showing examples of ones I’ve completed so far along with our transcripts.
I actually have a video on the schedule for this May to share an update on our transcripts and the NCAA paperwork I’ve gotten done so far. Be sure to check it out when it goes live as I’ll talk about course descriptions and show mine as samples
I have another question, my husband and I were just looking through the NCAA core course requirements and one is "Nondoctrinal comparative religion or philosophy". I'm wondering if you know if this is just one semester's worth or if it's more. I realize you may not have the answer but I thought I'd ask you first. Thank you so much.
I don’t believe it matters if it’s a semester or a full year. They want students to have a certain total number of core course credits overall (for example it’s 16 core credits for Divison I schools). A full year they count as 1 credit and a half year as 1/2.
Thank you for sharing this!!
This has been so helpful, THANK YOU!!!
Thank you very much. This video is very informative!
hi... great information.....did your daughters make it into D1 golf with scholarships....
She did! This summer she received an offer to play for IU Indianapolis.
@@mypracticallyimperfectlife That's Great ....what an achievement for you and your daughter.......we are in NY.., and trying to navigate the system.....as you expressed in your video.....its challenging. my daughter is a junior and we're reaching out to a local D1 college.... should be an interesting journey. Congratulations Again and best of luck.
Do you know what things would make the student ineligible? Does the choice of curriculum matter? Or if the student completed all the core subjects, have good grades, all the credits needed per their state plus a SAT score that meets their requierments, will they be eligible? Basically I'm asking do you know if they only accept certain curriculum? Thank you so much for this informative video.
From what I’ve learned in my research, the curriculum chosen doesn’t matter. It’s more about ensuring you’ve filled out the forms included in the NCAA homeschool packet as thoroughly as possible. I’ll actually be sharing an update in May showing examples of ones I’ve completed so far along with our transcripts.
@@mypracticallyimperfectlife thank you so much for responding. I'll be watching your other videos. Take care.
How have you gone about writing course descriptions? Would you be willing to share what you've done? Thank you!
I actually have a video on the schedule for this May to share an update on our transcripts and the NCAA paperwork I’ve gotten done so far. Be sure to check it out when it goes live as I’ll talk about course descriptions and show mine as samples
I have another question, my husband and I were just looking through the NCAA core course requirements and one is "Nondoctrinal comparative religion or philosophy". I'm wondering if you know if this is just one semester's worth or if it's more. I realize you may not have the answer but I thought I'd ask you first. Thank you so much.
I don’t believe it matters if it’s a semester or a full year. They want students to have a certain total number of core course credits overall (for example it’s 16 core credits for Divison I schools). A full year they count as 1 credit and a half year as 1/2.