SA Homeschooling
Guide
Starting homeschooling in South Australia can feel overwhelming at first, especially when you begin researching registration requirements, learning plans and reviews.
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The good news is that homeschooling does not need to look like school at home. Many SA families use flexible, personalised approaches that suit their child’s learning style, interests and needs.
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This guide is here to simplify the process and explain what homeschooling in South Australia generally looks like
Registering for Homeschooling in NT
Many families worry that they need:
- a dedicated classroom,
- expensive programs,
- strict school hours,
- or perfectly planned lessons.
That is not the expectation.
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4
Receive registration approval and begin your homeschooling journey.
3
Your application will be reviewed by the Home Education Unit to ensure a suitable educational program is being provided.
2
Prepare your learning plans and educational information showing how learning will be supported at home.
1
Submit your application and supporting documents.
Homeschooling in South Australia is registered through the Home Education Unit SA.
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The registration process generally looks like this:
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The SA
Learning Plan
One of the biggest worries for new homeschooling families is the learning plan.
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South Australia expects families to provide a suitable educational program that supports their child’s learning and development over time.
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This does not mean you must recreate school at home or follow a classroom model. It simply means your child’s learning should broadly address the Australian Curriculum.
Broad Education Program Inclusions:
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literacy and English
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mathematics and numeracy
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science and understanding the world
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humanities and social learning
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health and wellbeing
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creative arts
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technologies and practical skills
What Learning
Can Look Like
- reading together,
- coding,
- cooking,
- documentaries,
- excursions,
- games,
- projects,
- sports,
- museums,
- community activities,
- creative activities,
- and everyday life.
Your learning plans do not need to contain:
- rigid daily lesson plans,
- formal classroom timetables,
- or pages and pages of detailed programming.
Most families create flexible plans showing:
- learning focus areas,
- educational goals,
- topics or projects,
- planned activities,
- resources and programs,
- child interests and strengths,
- and how learning may be documented.
Records and Review
Once registered, families are expected to continue supporting and documenting learning over time. This is another area that sounds far scarier than it usually is.
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You do not need to keep every worksheet your child completes or create massive portfolios filled with perfectly organised evidence - the main goal is showing ongoing learning and educational progress over time.
Most homeschooling families collect evidence naturally as learning happens. Evidence may include:
- photos
- work samples
- journals
- reading records
- projects
- conversations
- observations
- videos
- online learning records
- artwork
- practical activities
- excursions
- creative work
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SIMPLIFY YOUR PATH
Our Free Planning Bundles
Our Planning Bundles are more specifically aligned to NSW wording considering their Learning Plans require a bit more detailed connection to Syllabus Outcomes. However, the planning bundles can be used in every State as a guide to how to connect everyday activities to learning areas and how to collect evidence.
Year Overview & Term Planners
A high-level glance at outcomes for every KLA, with term-by-term planners showing subject progression and consolidation targets.
End-of-Year Summaries
Track progress easily with simple checklists to mark where your child is achieving or emerging in confidence for each NESA outcome.
Evidence & Activity Logs
Clear guidance on capturing work samples and photos, removing the stress of remembering everything for your review visit.
Reflections & Lesson Ideas
Gentle reflection sheets to help you pause and adjust gently, plus hands-on activity bank for engaging homeschooling days.