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Latinos Homeschooling Group

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Recommended Ages

All ages

Latinos Homeschooling Group is an online community where Latino and Latine families can share resources, encouragement, and culturally relevant ideas for home education. Members trade curriculum recommendations, bilingual book lists, and strategies for honoring language and heritage within their homeschooling. Founded by parents who wanted a space where their lived experiences were centered, the group has become a hub for connection and mutual support. Parents value the chance to ask questions without having to explain cultural context and to find programs that reflect their families. It’s especially helpful for bilingual and bicultural households navigating both homeschooling and extended family expectations. As with any online group, tone and activity can vary over time, but the community has stayed consistently valuable for many. To maximize benefits, participate in discussions, share your own wins and challenges, and follow leads to local meetups when possible.

A wonderful fit for Latino and mixed‑culture families who want their children’s homeschooling experience to include Spanish, Latin American and U.S. Latino histories, and culturally responsive perspectives, along with peers who share similar backgrounds; especially helpful for new homeschoolers who want mentors who “get it” culturally as well as educationally.

Pros

Nation‑wide community founded by Gisela Quiñones that connects Latino homeschooling families through an online group, conferences, virtual classes and culturally grounded resources, helping parents navigate homeschooling while centering their language, history and identities; members appreciate the sense of belonging, Spanish‑language and Latino Studies offerings, and practical support that can be hard to find in mainstream homeschool spaces. 

Cons

As a community rather than a packaged curriculum, structure and offerings can shift over time depending on volunteer capacity and funding; most interaction happens online (especially via Facebook), which may not suit families who avoid social media; live classes and conferences may have limited spots or be scheduled in U.S. time zones; and the group focus is specifically on Latino families, so non‑Latino allies should join with care and respect for its mission.

Because this is a free support community rather than a paid curriculum or class provider, there is no direct use of ESA or charter funds; families instead use the group to discover other resources that may or may not be fundable.

Free

Latinos Homeschooling Group
$0.00 USD

Skills

What kids will learn

Latinos Homeschooling Group Mission

The mission of Latinos Homeschooling Group is to support Latino families who educate their children at home by providing community, culturally affirming resources, and practical guidance. Through conferences, virtual classes, workshops, and online spaces, the organization helps parents navigate homeschooling while centering Latino history, language, and identity. Latinos Homeschooling Group aims to ensure that Latino homeschoolers see their cultures reflected in their education and feel empowered to design learning that honors both their heritage and their children’s unique needs.

Latinos Homeschooling Group Story

Latinos Homeschooling Group began when founder Gisela Quiñones went looking for a homeschooling community that reflected her family’s culture—and couldn’t find one. She started a small online group to connect with other Latino parents, and that group quickly grew into a nationwide network of families sharing advice, encouragement, and resources. Over time, Gisela transformed the community into a nonprofit organization that now hosts conferences (including events at places like the National Museum of Mexican Art), live and virtual classes, and a growing Latino Studies program. What started as one mom’s search for connection has become a vibrant hub where Latino homeschoolers can learn, lead, and uplift one another.

About Modular Learning

FAQ: Additional Details about Latinos Homeschooling Group

A day with Latinos Homeschooling might involve checking the group feed for a new recommendation on a Spanish history book, meeting other families at a park day where kids play and swap stories in both English and Spanish, and joining an online discussion about balancing bilingualism with extended-family expectations. The atmosphere is casual, relational, and focused on belonging rather than assignments.

Latinos Homeschooling Group is a community rather than a formal curriculum, typically organized through social-media groups and local meetups that connect Latino and Spanish-speaking families who are homeschooling. Members share resources, answer questions, organize park days or field trips, and support one another in navigating homeschooling laws, bilingual education, and culturally responsive curriculum choices.

Parents are the core participants—they join discussions, ask and answer questions, and often volunteer to coordinate meetups or share their expertise. Kids benefit indirectly through friendships and group activities arranged by adults.

There are no academic prerequisites; families simply need an interest in homeschooling and a desire to connect with other Latino or Spanish-speaking homeschoolers.

This community is particularly supportive for Latino families, including those with neurodivergent children who need culturally aware advice and peer support. Parents can trade adaptations, bilingual resources, and local recommendations for kids with autism, ADHD, or learning disabilities.

There is nothing to refund—membership is typically free, and any paid events or resources recommended within the group would have their own separate refund policies handled by those providers.

Not designed as a primary curriculum or generic support group for all families; those seeking a full secular scope‑and‑sequence or strictly local, in‑person co‑op may need additional resources; families who prefer to keep homeschooling separate from ethnic or cultural identity work might not make full use of what the group offers.

For broader but still diversity‑focused support, families sometimes look at groups like Black and Brown Homeschoolers, secular multicultural homeschool collectives, or local language‑specific co‑ops; for curriculum, they may combine mainstream programs with Latino Studies resources, Spanish curricula and diverse book lists.

Community content is constantly evolving as new members join, moderators add files and guides, and local chapters arrange fresh events; focus topics may range from first-time homeschooling to advanced planning for college admissions.

When you join, take time to read the group guidelines and search past posts for topics like “getting started” or “high school”—you’ll often find long, thoughtful threads and recorded sessions that answer questions you haven’t even thought to ask yet.

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Meet Gisela

Gisela Quiñones is the founder of Latinos Homeschooling, a nonprofit dedicated to supporting Latino families on their homeschooling journeys. A homeschooling mom herself, she launched the group after realizing how few spaces existed where Latino homeschoolers could talk openly about culture, language, and education. Drawing on her experience organizing community events and her passion for Latino history and identity, Gisela has grown Latinos Homeschooling into a network that hosts conferences, classes, and workshops for families across the U.S. A fun fact: she often jokes that Latinos Homeschooling started as “just a little Facebook group,” proof of how powerful it can be when parents come together to meet a shared need.