Part 1- Homeschool vs. Charter Cyberschool: 7 Differences
State run public CHARTER CYBER SCHOOLS have been quite controversial in recent years.
Many HOMESCHOOLERS HAVE CONSIDERED using the services cyber charter schools offer at the cost of freedom.
There is definitely a trade-off between the help homeschoolers may need financially or educationally to teach their children vs. their ability to choose the content of their curriculum’s, values, faith and learning pace.
THE DIFFERENCES: HOMESCHOOLING vs. CHARTER CYBER SCHOOLING
1. Structure : The biggest difference is the highly structured learning for the kids the cyberschool offers. This can be a blessing and a curse. While the kids can stay on track better by the cyber school's pace and external pressure, this sometimes is detrimental and potentially very devastating to students who do not learn at the school’s pace.
This is not to say cyber schooled kids are physically more structured however, they still may school in PJs around the house, sit on the floor, read in bed or whatever. Usually older cyberschooled students spend more time online to complete their studies than traditionally homeschooled students. Parents of cyberschooled students definitely must spend more time online for reporting and monitoring.
2. Curriculum: There are a variety of curriculum choices available in the different cyber schools. These choices however are dependent upon the state’s education laws. So if you are in a highly regulated state ALL the schools within the state are going to require kids to jump through many hoops. They need them to perform well according to the state standards testing. Again, this can be a blessing and a curse.
Also, if you have differing faith based views than the standard curriculum you have to do more monitoring and re-teaching your children. This may require more work in the end compared to homeschooling.
3. Freedom: This one goes without saying. Teachable moments arrive in every family. While cyberschools go on to the NEXT lesson as usual, homeschooling allows the family to stop for a while and pursue interesting lessons, concepts or character issues. Homeschooling also lends itself well to family travel and responsibilities. Cyberschools tend to be very controlling and time consuming.
4. Supplies: Public cyberschools are usually free with little financial impact on the family. Homeschooling can cost quite a bit as the students get older. These paid materials however are usually more tailored to the students’ learning modality. They may also better reflect the faith and values of the family.
5. Support: One of the biggest potential benefits of cyber schooling is the help that the home facilitator receives from teachers and administrators outside the home. This same benefit can be had to some extent with a curriculum based homeschool co-op (group of families working together & usually meeting on a weekly basis). The truth is cyberschools vary in the support the students ACTUALLY get. Some cyberschools give mostly pressure to perform and not much tutoring help while others are extremely supportive and nurturing.
6. Busy-work: Cyberschools tend to require students to complete more busywork to create an effective paper-trail that proves learning. Homeschoolers are also required in most states to prove learning has taken place. Overall however, homeschooling tends to require less time on the student’s part doing busywork. Busywork time then can be used to pursue the students personal electives.
7. School Identity: Many homeschoolers grow up outside of the traditional “school pride” and identity that is had by attending a brick-and-mortar school. This doesn’t seem to effect them later in life…especially if they go on to graduate from traditional college.
SOME cyberschool students engage in their online “community” within their schools and attend their scheduled events and activities in person. This lends itself to more socialization of the child. Homeschoolers can also get a sense of school community if they grow up attending a homeschool co-op that is useful and has a lot of families.
There are tons of resources on this subject, here are a few:
Homeschooling vs. Cyberschooling
Homeschooling vs. Public or Private Schooling
Arguments for Both Homeschooling and Charter Cyberschooling
Related Post to this Article
Part 2 - Homeschooling vs. Cyber School - A Personal Journey




Heloise we are trying cyberschool...we can no longer deal with the regulations that Lehman is putting on us...We are using Agora, and we like it...one thing to mention about #6, Agora does not require the boys to do the work if they know it already...they can take the test and move on...so there is less busywork.
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Yes, we did really like that feature for Agora.... some of the other ones we attended didn't unfortunately. We did still have tons of paperwork for Agora in middle school. But it was more balanced by far than PA Leadership.
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