Can Home Educated Children Go to University?

Quick Answer
Yes, home educated children can go to university. Many universities accept a range of qualifications, including GCSEs, A levels, and alternative pathways. It is very common for home educated children to go to university if they want to.
Introduction
A common question is whether home education limits future opportunities.
In practice, many home educated students go on to further education and university. There is no reason why home education should limit a child. In reality being home educated prepares a child for university and makes them an ideal university student in lots of ways!
This page explains how this works.

Entry Requirements
Universities typically require:
– recognised qualifications
– evidence of learning
This can be achieved through different pathways.
Home Educating students might:
– take GCSEs and A levels
– follow alternative qualifications
– build portfolios of work
It can be useful to think of education in stages.
The GCSE stage unlocks the post 16 stage (which for many students means going to college).
The post 16 stage unlocks either a job or a university course.
So if you work out what you need to get onto each stage, you can reverse engineer what your child needs. For example, if a child needs a a level 3 qualification in Music Performance to get onto their preferred university course, then what do they need to do to get onto the level 3 course in Music Performance? It might look like this:
– home education – get 5 GCSEs including English and Maths
– post 16 – go to a local college and get level 3 qualification in Music Performance
– get accepted onto preferred degree course
In actual fact there are so many different routes but if you start with where your child thinks they want to head and work backwards, that can make the process feel less overwhelming. Obviously, they might change their mind along the way, and that is fine too!
Conclusion
Home education does not prevent access to university for those that want to go.
There are multiple pathways available depending on the child’s goals.

