What do we offer?


Elementary Age Events

From visiting the fire station to painting at the park, our elementary age students get an opportunity to meet together and have fun with their friends. We do activities that are age-appropriate and we encourage all families with kids from Pre-K through 5th grade to participate.

Elementary students learning about cows and the milking process at Homeland Creamery.

Family Nights

We love when the students can make friends, but it is even better when moms and dads get involved and meet other homeschool parents they can connect with. We plan a variety of family friendly events from indoor game days, movie nights, or outings to bowling or golf. Anything to bring our families together and get all ages involved is a fun time!

One of our families dressed up and ready for the festivities!

Prom/Dance

What high school student doesn’t love going to prom? Many of our high school students enjoy attending prom, where they get to dance and have fun with not just our own CCHE members but also other homeschool students from all over the Triad Area.

High schoolers aren’t the only ones who get to dance, though. We host a family dance in February that includes all age groups.

A few of our middle school students having a blast at their snowball dance.

Graduation

We offer a graduation ceremony to celebrate our seniors. We allow our graduates and their parents to help plan this event so all families can be a part of the celebration.

Our 2023 graduates!

Testing

We offer standardized testing as a group in the spring. For a minimal cost we provide the tests, facility, proctors, and scoring of a nationally standardized test for grades 1-12. This test meets the state requirement for annual testing of your homeschool student

Teen Activities

Our teens from 6th grade up to 12th grade love to meet up every month for some new and wild adventures. In the past we have taken our teens on hikes, to play laser tag, on scavenger hunts, to museums and more!

Teens dressed up for a live action Clue game.

 Field Trips

We know many families have kids in multiple age groups. In addition to activities split by age groups we also like to come together once a month for a field trip that the whole family can do together. We enjoy zoos, museums, orchards, historical sites, and anything new that comes our way. Some of our field trips are free and others have additional fees.

Some of our students on our trip to the bronze foundry.

 Academic Fairs

Give your child the opportunity to learn about and display themed subject matter such as science, historical figures, or art. In years past we have done art fairs where kids can display and show off their creative skills. We have also done science fairs and wax museums. Our students enjoy these projects and they are a great way to practice public speaking and presenting.

Students awarded at one of our science fairs.

Yearbook

From Preschool to our graduating seniors, we find that the yearbook is a special way to look back on all the sweet memories and friendships made throughout the year. We include pictures from each of our social events as well as individual student pictures sorted by grade. The yearbook is put together by a student committee made up of high schoolers and finalized by our board.

Some of our yearbooks from over the years!

Enrichment Days

Enrichment Day gives our kids many of the same experiences public school students enjoy—just with more fresh air. We gather at the park for a day that feels like a field trip and a school day rolled into one. We have done Show and Tell, building public speaking and listening skills, just like in traditional classroom morning meetings. We’ve done Art Time, where kids explore creative expression with group supplies and guided projects, similar to an elementary art class. Next comes science experiments—think elephant toothpaste, chromatography, or simple cooking—done together like a lab day in school. We also squeeze in group games, a read-aloud, and a lunch break, offering the social routines, collaboration, and structure kids would experience in a public school setting. It’s not school-at-home; it’s school-in-the-park.

Finding leaves for a chromatography experiment.