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Homeschooling high school

Homeschooling High School in Indiana

Graduating a homeschooler in Indiana means setting your own requirements, tracking credits and GPA, and building a transcript colleges accept. Here's how it works — and how to keep the records straight.

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Indiana at a glance

Required days
180 days/year
Required subjects
Your choice
Notice
Not required
Testing / evaluation
Not required
Recordkeeping
Recommended

Jump to the full Indiana requirements for plain-English detail on each of these.

Graduation requirements in Indiana

Indiana does not issue homeschool diplomas, so as the parent-administrator you set the graduation requirements and award the diploma yourself. A common college-prep plan covers 4 years of English, 3–4 of math, 3 of science, 3 of social studies, 2 of a foreign language, plus electives — typically around 24 credits total. Check any Indiana-specific expectations for your situation, and align with the admissions requirements of the colleges your student is targeting.

Credits and GPA

A standard high-school credit (a Carnegie unit) represents roughly 120–180 hours of instruction in a subject over the year, or about a full-year course. Half-credit courses are common for semester-long electives. Track grades per course and compute a weighted or unweighted GPA on a 4.0 scale. Our free GPA calculator can do the math, and Homeschool Fox tracks credits and grades for you as you log coursework.

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Testing and assessment

No, Indiana does not require standardized testing or formal assessments for homeschooled students. However, many families choose to use assessments voluntarily to track progress.

Building a college-ready transcript

Selective colleges expect a clean, professional transcript listing courses, credits, grades, and GPA, often alongside a school profile and course descriptions. You can build one in Indiana yourself — a standard transcript is included with Homeschool Fox, and the $29 official transcript add-on generates AI-drafted course descriptions and a school profile that admissions readers expect.

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Keeping records through high school

Keep coursework, reading lists, grades, and work samples organized from 9th grade on — reconstructing four years at application time is painful. Even though Indiana is relatively hands-off, strong high-school records are what colleges and scholarship programs ask for.

What Homeschool Fox tracks for Indiana

Everything Indiana expects you to keep, in one place — no spreadsheets, no lost notebooks.

  • Days toward your 180-day goal
  • Required subjects & core hours
  • Daily activity logs
  • Attendance records
  • Notes & portfolio records
  • Printable PDF reports
  • High school transcripts
  • State-specific progress tracking
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Build a Indiana homeschool transcript

Track credits and grades as you go, then generate a college-ready transcript when it's time to apply.

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