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Medium regulation

How to homeschool a child with dyslexia in Oregon

Homeschooling a child with dyslexia in Oregon works best when the legal checklist is simple and the daily routine is built around the child’s actual needs.

Plain-English note: this is a parent guide, not legal advice. Use the official source links at the bottom of the page before a deadline or filing decision.

Oregon legal starting point

Oregon law allows children to be educated at home by a parent, legal guardian, or private teacher, but the family must give written notice to the local education service district and follow the state's testing rules. Students are generally tested in grades 3, 5, 8, and 10, with extra follow-up possible for low or declining scores. The statute also allows different evaluation handling for some students with disabilities.

Special education notes

Oregon's statute gives a separate path for some homeschooled students with disabilities. If a child has an individualized education program and receives special education and related services through the school district, or is taught under a privately developed plan, satisfactory educational progress may be evaluated under that program or plan instead of the usual testing schedule.

Supports that often help dyslexia

explicit reading instruction, audiobooks, oral answers, assistive technology, and reduced copywork when appropriate

Curriculum selection

  1. 1Choose level before grade label.
  2. 2Reduce friction before adding more subjects.
  3. 3Use accommodations that preserve learning without unnecessary battles.
  4. 4Document what works so future evaluations, doctors, tutors, or schools have a clear history.

Oregon records and testing

Families should keep copies of their written notice to the education service district, the district's written acknowledgment, test information and results, any special education evaluation reports used instead of testing, attendance records, work samples, and high school transcripts. Testing/evaluation: Yes. Home-instructed students are generally examined in grades 3, 5, 8, and 10.

Related homeschool guides for Oregon

These internal links connect curriculum, schedule, special-needs, testing, and state-law pages so parents can move from a search question to the legal checklist without starting over.

Free printables

Download the homeschool starter kit

Print these before you start: a state startup checklist, letter-of-intent template, attendance tracker, and high-school transcript template.

View all downloads

These printables are general planning tools, not legal advice. Always verify the current rule on your state page and official source links before filing deadlines.

Frequently asked questions

Can I homeschool a child with dyslexia in Oregon?

Homeschooling is legal in Oregon, but families have ongoing obligations that make it more regulated than a low-regulation state.

Does Oregon provide special education services to homeschoolers?

Oregon's statute gives a separate path for some homeschooled students with disabilities. If a child has an individualized education program and receives special education and related services through the school district, or is taught under a privately developed plan, satisfactory educational progress may be evaluated under that program or plan instead of the usual testing schedule.

What should I document for a child with dyslexia?

Keep curriculum notes, accommodations, work samples, evaluations, therapy notes if relevant, and any records required by your state summary.

Start with the Oregon legal checklist

This guide is useful only if it sits on top of the actual Oregon homeschool requirements. Review the state law hub before buying curriculum, changing schools, or setting deadlines.

Oregon homeschool requirements