SCHOLARSHIPS
Researching scholarships and financial assistance is the responsibility of the parents and the student. It is our desire, however, to be of assistance whenever possible. The following is a list of resources for scholarship information. We recommend that parents and students start researching, preparing, and applying for scholarships as early as the beginning of the junior year. Many scholarships have early deadlines. For example:
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Tennessee Promise Scholarship: applications by November 1 of senior year
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FAFSA’s deadline for state grants: February 15 of the senior year
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Sam Walton Scholarship: usually January deadline
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Tennessee Hope Scholarship: FAFSA deadline September 1 of senior year
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To be eligible for the TN Hope Scholarship, students must be enrolled in a homeschool program for one full school year immediately prior to graduation.
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1. Online Scholarship & College Information
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A. Tennessee Student Assistance Corporation (TSAC)​
Tennessee Hope Scholarship: TSAC awards the TN Hope Scholarship to schooled students who make an ACT composite score of at least 21 (or SAT equivalent) and have been enrolled with a homeschool program for a full school year immediately prior to graduation. For more information on this scholarship, go to www.collegefortn.org/tennessee-hope-scholarship-3/.
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Tennessee Promise Scholarship: This TSAC-administered scholarship offers two free years of college. It requires the student to meet a series of requirements with strict deadlines (e.g., application for the scholarship by November 1 of the senior year). For more information on this scholarship, go to www.collegefortn.org/tnpromise/.
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B. Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA)
(Automatically enters student for the TN Hope Scholarship)
May 15th deadline
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C. Other Sites
www.collegefortn.org/tennessee-financial-aid/
www.scholarships.com
www.fastweb.com
www.supercollege.com
www.collegescholarships.com
www.college-scholarships.com
www.coca-colascholarsfoundation.org/apply/
www.guaranteed-scholarships.com
www.scholarshiphelp.org
www.petersons.com
www.freschinfo.com
www.free-4u.com
www.collegeboard.com
scholarshipamerica.org
securingdegrees.org
www.walmartfoundation.org
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2. How to Get Scholarships
A. Helpful Strategies
Research available scholarships, paying particular attention to their requirements and deadlines. Remember that preparation of transcripts and other paperwork takes time. We try to fulfill requests in the order they were received, and others may be ahead of you. So, please submit your requests early to make sure you meet scholarship deadlines.
Take a practice ACT/SAT or the PSAT to prepare for the ACT/SAT. See our ACT/SAT page HERE.
Make an ACT or SAT score acceptable for the scholarship/financial aid you seek. (The ACT/SAT score may determine college entrance as well.)
Participate in community service and/or volunteer opportunities. These can be used as part of the student’s portfolio and is looked upon favorably by scholarship committees.
Include portfolio information. This requires planning early in the student’s high- school career. It is helpful for the portfolio to indicate an interest and aptitude for the major the student will pursue or the field related to a specific scholarship.
If the scholarship requires an essay, make sure yours represents your best writing and includes real-life experiences (if appropriate).
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B. More About Portfolios​
Admission into certain colleges and universities, as well as application for certain scholarships can involve serious competition. When colleges or scholarship committees evaluate applications in a highly competitive situation, they may prefer students who appear to be well-rounded, successful, and likely to make a difference in the world.
A student’s abilities, successes, and interests outside of academic work are not necessarily reflected by the academic transcript. A portfolio can showcase a student’s character, qualities, skills, talents, hobbies, accomplishments, honors, and involvement in the community. It may include volunteer work, club/organization participation, leadership experience, performance awards, mission work, etc.
Some college and scholarship applications include space for portfolio information. A portfolio may also physically accompany a transcript when submitted to a college or scholarship committee.
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3. Recommended Books
A. On Preparing for College
The Homeschooler’s Guide to Portfolios and Transcripts
by Loretta Heuer, M.Ed.
ISBN: 0-02-863738-0
Homeschooling High School: Planning Ahead for College Admission
by Jeanne Gowen Dennis
ISBN: 1-932096-11-6
Home School, High School, and Beyond
by Beverly Adams-Gordon
ISBN: 1-888827-22-X
An Instruction Book for the Parents of College-Bound Students
by Linda O’Brien
www.woodburnpress.com
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The Guidance Manual for the Christian Home School
by David and Laurie Callihan
ISBN 1564144526
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B. On College Funding​
Cash for College
by Cynthia Ruiz McKee & Philip C. McKee, Jr.
ISBN 0688161901
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Free Money for College
by Laurie Blum
ISBN 081603
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How to Go to College Almost for Free
by Ben Kaplan
ISBN 0-06-093765-3
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C. For ACT/SAT Preparation
SAT Strategies for Super Busy Students
Kaplan Publishing
ISBN: 978-1-4195-5161-1
(ACT) ISBN: 978-1-4195-5160-4
ACT Premier Program (2008 Ed.)
Kaplan Publishing
ISBN: 978-1-4195-5163-5
(SAT) ISBN: 978-1-4195-5138-3
These two books have a “Higher Score Guarantee.”
See also information under "ACT/SAT/PSAT" on our High School page.