Do You Have to Follow the National Curriculum to Home Educate? (UK)
Quick answer No. You do not have to follow the national curriculum to home educate in...

Yes, you can home educate and work. Home education does not have to mean one parent at home full-time. Families make it work through flexible or remote work, self-employment, shift-splitting between two parents, older children learning more independently, and help from tutors, groups and family. It is a real juggle, and it is genuinely done every day, including by single parents.
The single biggest reason parents rule out home education is money: the belief that it means one adult gives up work and the household survives on one income. For some families that is the choice they make, and it works. But it is not the only way, and treating it as the only way stops a lot of people who could absolutely do this.
Home education does not have to look like a stay-at-home parent running lessons from nine to three. It looks like whatever fits your family, your work and your child. Here are the shapes it actually takes.
If there are two adults, the most common model is simply splitting the week. One works Monday to Wednesday, the other Thursday and Friday. Shift patterns, compressed hours, one early start and one late, a parent who works evenings or weekends. It rarely looks tidy, but plenty of families run their whole week this way, trading off who is with the children and who is earning.
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Remote and flexible work has made this far easier than it used to be. A parent working from home can be present while a child gets on with independent tasks, breaking to help when needed and doing focused learning around calls and deadlines. Self-employment gives the most control of all: you build the work around the child rather than the child around the work. Freelancers, childminders, online sellers, cleaners, carers, tutors and creatives home educate in the gaps their own schedules allow.
A big surprise for new home educators is how little one-to-one time older children actually need. Home education is not six hours of a parent teaching. A motivated ten or twelve year old can read, research, write, practise and follow their interests for long stretches while you work in the same room or nearby. The job shifts from teacher to facilitator: you set things up, check in, and answer questions, rather than delivering constant lessons.
Working home educators lean on a mix of support, and there is no shame in it:
It would be dishonest to pretend home educating alone is as straightforward as sharing it. It is harder. But single parents do it, through flexible or part-time work, self-employment, older children who can be trusted with independence, strong local home-ed networks, and a lot of realism about what a day can hold.
One thing to be clear about: choosing to home educate does not change your Universal Credit work-related requirements. What is expected of you depends on the age of your youngest child, exactly as it would if that child were in school, not on whether you home educate. This catches people out, so it is worth reading our full breakdown of home education and your money before you plan around it.
Working and home educating is a juggle, and the serene, sunlit home-ed day you see online is a highlight reel, not a Tuesday. Some days the work wins and the learning is a documentary and a walk. Some days the learning wins and you catch up on work at 9pm. That is not failing, it is real life with the flexibility built in. Be as kind to yourself as you would be to a friend doing the same thing.
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