Florida homeschool portfolio records, organized as you go.
Save worksheets, project photos, reading notes, field trips, hands-on activities, and learning days from your phone — then turn them into clean portfolio-style records when review time comes.
Florida portfolio
Maya’s learning records
January — April 2026
42
Learning days
18
Proof records
6
Subjects
Seed germination photos
Hands-on science · Apr 18
Library reading notes
Language arts · Apr 16
Museum field trip
History · Apr 12
The portfolio scramble
Portfolio time should not mean digging through a year of scattered records.
Most families already have proof of learning. The hard part is finding it, remembering the context, and pulling it together when someone asks to see what happened.
Photos stuck in your camera roll
Worksheets in different folders
Notes spread across notebooks or Google Drive
Hands-on learning that is hard to prove later
Trying to remember everything near the end of the year
The calmer way
Turn everyday learning into organized portfolio proof.
Homeschool Keeper helps parents capture learning proof as it happens, organize it by student, subject, and date, and prepare clean portfolio-style records.
Less hunting. More remembering what actually happened.
Use it for the everyday things that make up a real homeschool year: reading on the couch, math games, co-op projects, nature walks, kitchen-table worksheets, life skills, and the quick notes you do not want to lose.
Homeschool Keeper helps families organize homeschool records. It does not provide legal advice or guarantee compliance with Florida homeschool requirements. Always check official state guidance or your evaluator’s expectations.
How it works
A simple rhythm for Florida portfolio records.
Save proof while the learning is fresh, then bring it together when portfolio review time comes.
- 01
Capture learning proof
Save worksheets, project photos, field trips, games, and hands-on learning from your phone.
- 02
Add a quick note
Write one simple sentence about what happened while the learning is still fresh.
- 03
Organize by student, subject, and date
Keep each child’s portfolio records easier to find when review time comes.
- 04
Create a portfolio-style report
Turn saved records into a clean summary you can review, print, or share as needed.
What you can save
Keep the small pieces that tell the story of the year.
Portfolio records can come from more than worksheets. Homeschool Keeper is built for the messy, practical proof parents already collect.
A personal first look
Want to see what your records could look like?
Send 3 sample learning records and we’ll show you what an organized portfolio-style page could look like.
Worksheets, project photos, reading notes, field trips, hands-on activities, and learning moments all work.
Early access
Help shape Homeschool Keeper for Florida homeschool families.
Join the early list and help us understand what Florida parents need when turning everyday learning into portfolio-ready records.
Florida early access
Join Florida Early Access
Join the early list and help us shape Homeschool Keeper for Florida homeschool families.
Having trouble seeing the form? Open it in a new tab.
Questions
A few things to know.
This Florida page is for positioning and early-access validation. Homeschool Keeper is still being shaped with real homeschool parents.
Is this only for Florida families?
This page is focused on Florida homeschool parents, but Homeschool Keeper is being built for homeschool families more broadly.
Is this a legal compliance tool?
No. Homeschool Keeper helps organize records and portfolio-style documentation. It does not provide legal advice or guarantee compliance.
What if our homeschool is mostly hands-on?
Homeschool Keeper is designed for photos, notes, projects, field trips, games, life skills, and other learning that may not create worksheets.
Is this mainly an attendance tracker?
No. Attendance is included, but the main value is organizing learning proof and portfolio records.