Allen, Texas K-12
Allen K-12 Online Home School
An accredited, self-paced K-12 program for Allen families who want a clear, personal plan for their student, not a one-size-fits-all classroom. Here is exactly how that plan comes together.

Start here
A Town That Plans for the Long Game
Allen is a Collin County town families pick on purpose: the schools, the room to grow, the famously big stadium on a Friday night, and the corporate gravity of the Plano-to-Frisco corridor next door. Many parents work in tech or finance and travel often, and a lot of students are already on a competitive schedule of practice, club teams, and academic acceleration. A self-paced, accredited K-12 program is built for that house. The plan is set for your student, the calendar belongs to your family, and the accredited record stays steady from one Allen year to the next. Want the overview first? Here is how self-paced online high school works, and a plain summary of the accredited K-12 program.
The program runs the full K-12 path, and it works the same whether your family is near the stadium, out by Watters Creek, in Twin Creeks, or Star Creek. Families across Allen, McKinney, Fairview, Lucas, and the north Plano line use it the same way, with the same plan and the same accredited record behind it.
How placement works
Placed by Skill, Not by Birthday
Your student does not get dropped into a grade by age. A counselor reviews recent work and places them by demonstrated skill, subject by subject, so a child who is ahead in math and building confidence in writing starts each at the right level on day one. Here is the shape of the path.
| Stage | What the work looks like | Where it leads |
|---|---|---|
| Elementary, K-5 | Short, clear, repeatable lessons that build reading, writing, and math without long, exhausting days. | Elementary program |
| Middle, 6-8 | Stronger independence and study habits, with the pace easing up or speeding up as each subject clicks. | Middle school |
| High, 9-12 | Accredited coursework with honors-level options inside one structure, on a schedule that fits training, travel, and real life. | Online high school path |
An example: one student, placed by skill on the same day, not by birthday
The curriculum, grade by grade
How the Grades Build on Each Other
The program runs the whole way from kindergarten through senior year, and each stage is built to hand the student to the next one ready. The level is set by what the student can actually do, so the move from one grade to the next is a real step forward, not a date on a calendar.
Elementary, K-5
The early years stay short and steady. Reading, writing, and math come in clear, repeatable lessons that build a foundation without the long, draining days a young child does not need. Confidence is the real subject here, and a calm morning of focused work leaves the rest of the day open. A parent stays close to the daily work at this age, which is exactly what it calls for, and the lessons are simple enough to run without a teaching degree.
Grade pages: Kindergarten, 4th grade, 5th grade.
Middle school, 6-8
These grades are where independence and real study habits form. The work asks more of the student, the pace eases up or speeds up subject by subject, and a counselor keeps an eye on the whole picture so nothing slips while a young teen is finding their feet. A student who was bored or lost in a crowded room often steadies here, because the work finally meets them where they are instead of dragging them along or leaving them behind.
Grade pages: 6th grade, 7th grade, 8th grade.
High school, 9-12
The high school years are accredited coursework with honors-level options inside one structure, arranged around training, travel, and whatever else the family’s calendar holds. A counselor maps the path year by year so the student stays on track to finish, with no surprise gaps at the end. The result is a record built to carry the student cleanly into whatever comes next, with the work organized so the final year is a finish line, not a scramble.
Grade pages: 9th grade, 10th grade, 11th grade, 12th grade.
Sample courses: Algebra, Geometry, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, World History, U.S. History, Government, Economics.
A week in practice
What a School Week Actually Looks Like
There is no bell and no fixed homeroom, but there is a clear rhythm. Most families settle into a simple weekly shape that keeps the work moving without filling the whole day.
| Part of the week | What happens |
|---|---|
| Set the targets | At the start of the week you and your student see what each subject needs, then decide which mornings or afternoons the work lands in. |
| Focused blocks | The student works in short, real sessions instead of a six-hour day. Lessons are interactive, not just pages to read, so attention holds. |
| Review and adjust | You see every finished assignment and grade as it lands, from anywhere, and shift the plan when a week gets busy. |
Because a parent can see the full record at any time, a mom or dad traveling for work still knows exactly where the week stands without having to ask anyone.
How a focused school day tends to split
What’s included
What Comes With the Program
Enrollment is not just a login and a pile of links. Every family gets the same core pieces, whether the student is in second grade or finishing twelfth.
| What you get | What it means day to day |
|---|---|
| A full course load | Core subjects plus electives, all online and built for self-paced work, so a student is never waiting on a shipment, a substitute, or a classroom to catch up. |
| A personal plan | A written, subject-by-subject plan set at enrollment and revisited as the student moves, so you always know what is finished and what is next. |
| Academic support | Help is there when a lesson does not click, by message or a scheduled call, instead of waiting for office hours the next day. |
| Progress you can see | A live record of finished work and grades that a parent can open from anywhere, at any hour, with no email to the front office required. |
| One accredited record | The transcript is kept for you and follows the student through every move and every year, ready whenever it is needed. |
Why families here choose it
Room for the Way Allen Actually Trains
Between practice schedules at the stadium, the club fields at the Allen Sports Park, and parent commutes south to Plano and Frisco, a 7:45 bell rarely fits an Allen family’s real week. Self-paced coursework lands in the hours you actually have, a student front-loads the work before a tournament weekend, and a parent who travels can still see the whole week’s progress from anywhere.
The day bends around training and travel. The accredited record keeps up.
A note from the Head of School
Do not wait for a semester to start. The most useful first move for a Allen family is the fifteen-minute counselor call with your student’s most recent records in hand. We place by skill, subject by subject, so a student who is ahead in one area and steady in another begins each at the right level on day one.
Who it fits
The Students Who Do Well Here
Self-paced school is not for one kind of student. In Allen it tends to fit a few families especially well.
The competitive athlete. Practice at the stadium, club teams at the Allen Sports Park, and tournament weekends that swallow a Friday. When the school day is yours to arrange, training and travel stop costing the student ground in class.
The student ready to move faster. A lot of Allen students are already accelerating. Self-paced work lets a student who has mastered a unit move straight into the next one, with honors-level options instead of sitting through a review the room still needs.
The family on the corridor. Tech and finance careers send Allen parents to Plano, Frisco, and out of state on short notice. The accredited record is one continuous document, so a move or a long trip does not cost a semester.
From the front lines
What We Hear From Allen Families
In Allen the first conversation almost always involves a calendar that is already full. A club season that runs across two counties, a parent commuting down to Plano or Frisco, a student pushing to get ahead. The worry is usually the same: will moving to a home program cost the student something, either academically or socially. It does not. The coursework is accredited and the day belongs to the family, so the athlete trains, the accelerated student keeps climbing, and the record stays solid the whole way. Parents tell us the relief shows up in the small things first, the mornings that stop being a fight and the weekends that stop being a scramble between a game and a stack of make-up work. The student is not behind for missing a Friday, because there is no class to fall behind. The plan simply moves with them.
The record that lasts
An Accredited Record That Holds Up
The reason families pick an accredited program over a loose curriculum is the paperwork at the end. Coursework here is accredited, which means the transcript is a professional document built to recognized standards, not a homemade list. It carries grades, course titles, and progress in a form a Texas university admissions office or an employer reads without a second thought.
The high school path leads to a real diploma earned through completed, accredited work, with honors-level options inside the same structure for students who want them. A counselor builds the four-year plan subject by subject, so the record is complete and the student is never short at the end.
That record is the quiet reason families stay. A transcript built to recognized standards is read the same way whether the next step is a local high school, a move to another state, or an application years down the road. The work a student does this year keeps its value long after the year is over.
Changing schools
Switching in the Middle of the Year
Most families do not arrive at the start of a semester. They arrive when something stops working: a schedule that will not bend, a class moving too slow or too fast, a move across town or across the country. Switching mid-year does not mean starting over.
A counselor reviews the most recent records, places the student by skill, and carries forward the work that already counts, so a strong semester is never thrown away. Because the coursework is self-paced, the student picks up at the right point instead of repeating a finished unit or sitting through one they have not reached yet. There is no waiting for the next term, and no lost time while the paperwork catches up.
The legal basics
Homeschooling in Texas, in Plain English
Is online home school legal in Allen?
Yes. Under Texas law, a home school is treated as a private school (Texas Education Code 25.086). Families teach in good faith a curriculum that includes reading, spelling, grammar, math, and good citizenship. Authority: the Texas Education Agency.
What records should we keep?
Keep it simple: a course list, progress reports, and a withdrawal letter if you are leaving a Allen ISD campus. Our accredited program keeps the cumulative record for you.
What does a compliant home school actually need?
Three things: teach in good faith, cover the basic subjects (reading, spelling, grammar, math, and good citizenship), and use a written curriculum. An accredited program satisfies all three and documents it for you, so there is nothing to assemble yourself.
How do we leave a Allen ISD campus the right way?
Send a short written withdrawal notice to the campus, ask for a copy of the records, and begin the home routine. There is no waiting period, and a counselor walks you through the wording.
Do we have to report to the state or take state tests?
Texas does not require home-schooled students to register with the state or sit the state standardized tests. You teach the required subjects in good faith and keep your own records, and our accredited program handles that record-keeping for you.
Will this be recognized later on?
Yes. Because the coursework is accredited, the transcript is a recognized document, and a counselor makes sure the high school plan lines up with whatever the student is aiming for after.
A day that fits
A Day That Fits Practice, Travel, and Home
When a Saturday tournament eats Friday, or a parent is in Houston for the week, the coursework opens on your schedule and the student picks up exactly where they left off. Nothing is marked late, and no cohort moves ahead without you.

A self-paced day leaves room for the team, the trip, and the family.
A 40-second look
How It Works for Texas Families
From families like yours
What Allen Families Say
★★★★★“The plan made it click. Our daughter finally works at her real level instead of waiting on the class.”
A Allen parent
★★★★★“My dad travels for work and still sees everything I finish each week. School comes with us.”
A Allen student
★★★★★“We switched in October and did not lose a thing. The counselor mapped it out and our son was settled in about a week.”
A Allen parent
Worth knowing
A Few Things Worth Knowing
Relocating and international families
Moving across the country, or across an ocean, used to mean scrambling to find a new school, hoping credits transfer cleanly, and watching your kid spend the first month catching up instead of learning. Online home school flips that script entirely. When your family relocates, the classroom does not relocate with you, because it never had a physical address to begin with. Your child logs in from the new zip code, the new time zone, or a temporary apartment in another country, and the lesson picks up exactly where it left off. Same coursework. Same teacher who already knows how your student thinks. Same progress record, untouched. For families who move frequently, whether due to military orders, corporate transfers, or an international assignment, that kind of continuity is not a convenience; it is a genuine academic advantage.
The transcript question is a real one, and it deserves a straight answer. Because the curriculum stays consistent regardless of where your family lands, transferring credits from one phase of the school year to the next is far less complicated than it would be moving between two traditional brick-and-mortar buildings in different districts. The cumulative record is clean, coherent, and follows a single academic thread, which matters enormously when a student eventually transitions to the next school or completes graduation requirements. International families especially appreciate that accredited coursework does not get dismissed or questioned at the destination. The record travels. The relationship with teachers travels. The learning never stops.
Faith- and values-centered families
Some families don’t just want a school. They want a partner that respects the fact that parents are the primary educators, the ones who decide what the dinner-table conversation sounds like and what the family holds sacred. That’s a completely reasonable expectation, and it’s exactly the space where an accredited online school earns its seat at the table. The academics show up fully equipped: certified teachers, a structured curriculum, official transcripts, and a credential that transfers and travels. The values, the worldview, the rhythm of the week? Those stay where they belong, with you. Whether the household observes a Sabbath, centers learning around Scripture, anchors the day in prayer, or simply insists that character development is not an elective, the schedule bends to support that, not the other way around.
Families navigating this balance for the first time often discover that the mechanics are simpler than they feared. The guide to getting started walks through the practical steps without assuming any single belief framework, because the path looks different for every household. Older students especially appreciate that self-paced coursework means a teen can finish biology before a mission trip and pick up history again when life settles. The school handles the rigor. The family handles the formation. That’s not a compromise. That’s the whole point.
Questions families ask
Allen Online Home School FAQ
How fast can my student start?
Any week of the year. There is no semester start to wait for. After the counselor call, placement and the first lessons can be ready within days.
Is the program accredited?
Yes. The coursework is accredited, and the record supports applications to Texas colleges and universities.
What if we move or travel?
The accredited record is one continuous document that follows your family to a new address, another state, or overseas, with no semester lost.
Can a student who is ahead move faster?
Yes. Because the work is self-paced, a student who has mastered a unit moves straight into the next one, with honors-level options inside the same structure.
What technology do we need?
A reliable laptop and internet are the main requirements to get started.
How do we withdraw from a current school?
Send a withdrawal notice to your current campus, request the records, and begin the home routine. A counselor walks you through it.
What about friends and socialization?
Self-paced school frees up the daytime hours, which families fill with co-ops, club sports, scouts, church groups, and the parks and community spaces near home. The social life happens out in the community instead of a hallway. Here is how online students build a social life.
Do you support students with an IEP or 504 plan?
Yes. The self-paced structure already does much of what an accommodation asks for: extra time, a quiet space, and a flexible pace per subject. Bring the current plan to the counselor call and we build the routine around it.
How should we think about cost?
A home program removes a lot of the hidden spending around a daily commute and a packed school calendar, and it keeps the schedule open for a working parent. A counselor walks through exactly what enrollment includes on the call, and we are fully transparent about cost.
Can my student still do sports, clubs, or activities?
Yes. A self-paced day frees up the hours a fixed school schedule eats, which is exactly why competitive athletes, performers, and busy families choose it. Community sports, co-ops, and clubs all fit around the coursework instead of fighting it.
How much time does the school day take?
Less than a traditional day for most students, because there is no waiting on a class of thirty to catch up or move on. The hours are focused, and then the student is done, with the rest of the day theirs.
What if my student is behind in a subject?
Then that subject starts where the student actually is, not where a grade level says they should be. They build the missing pieces at their own pace while staying on level in the subjects where they are strong, so nothing stalls the whole year.
Getting started
What the First Two Weeks Look Like
The start is deliberately undramatic. After the counselor call, placement comes back within a few days and the first plan is ready to open. The opening days are about settling into a rhythm, not racing, so the student gets used to working in focused blocks and you get used to seeing the record fill in as the work is finished.
By the end of the first week, most families have found the hours that fit, whether that is early mornings before practice or quiet afternoons at home. By the end of the second, the questions usually shift from how does this work to what is next, which is exactly where a counselor wants you. Nothing about the first month is locked, and the plan is adjusted as real life shows you what actually fits your family.
Read next
Resources for Allen Families
A few places to get the full picture before the call:
More Texas cities
Texas Cities We Serve
High School of America works with families across Texas. A few more cities we serve: Sugar Land, Garland, Arlington, Irving, Bryan, Harlingen, Edinburg, Tyler, Mansfield, Victoria, Temple, Baytown.
Two ways in
Get Started in Allen
Whether your student is transferring mid-year or starting fresh, the first step is the same fifteen-minute conversation.
Transferring from a local school
Bring your student’s most recent records to the counselor call. We review transcripts from Allen ISD and other districts, place by skill, and carry forward the credits that count.
Starting fresh
No records yet, no problem. The counselor sets a starting point with a short skills check and builds the plan from there.