Would starting to homeschool myself in 11th grade hurt my chances at getting into top LACs?

<p>Maybe you’re real OP, but this is sounding more like someone playing a character instead of real. The home shoolers that I have enccountered who are sincerely seeking college advice are willing to consider suggestions. Many are enhancing their home education by branching out into new situations- such as group classes- in order to prepare for college, not get away from people. </p>

<p>Real or not, and regardless of political preference, asking advice and arguing about it is a waste of everyone’s time. If you want to go to college, OP, better to spend this time researching your options than disputing the advice you’ve gotten here. So, to answer the OP’s main question- decent home schooling curricula are available, many through state programs that are low to no cost, Stanford as you mentioned is one, Florida Virtual School is good ( has an out of state option). Successful home schoolers can get admitted to the colleges you are looking at. Many colleges have information for applicants that are home schooled on their websites. Read them, make a plan, contact the college with any questions. </p>

<p>A >90% admission rate doesn’t exactly strike me as synonymous with “elite”, be it Patrick Henry or Northern Arizona University. But maybe we draw our parameters differently.</p>

<p>Look at their average GPA and SAT score. I said “Elite Christian college” I am not saying that it has the prestige of Harvard or Yale, but again, they have sent several students to Harvard and Yale law. Take a look at their website, and their curriculum.</p>