I have not been asked the question “Are you qualified to teach?” but I wholeheartedly agree with mrsjamiesouth! Any high school graduate should be able to teach another student the things they learned during their own High School education. If not, what good did that highly valued ps education do for them?
As we move into the higher math and science courses with my oldest daughter, I know that we will experience challenges, but there are so many resources out there to help. We’ve (and I do mean “we”) have been learning pre-Algebra (me,re-learning) and stuff does come back to you. We’ve also been doing Apologia’s General science and I’ve found that I need to read the chapters she working on too, so that I can help her understand any difficult concepts. I’m getting an education myself; some concepts are distantly familar and some things are brand new to me (could it be that there are “GAPS” in a ps education, too?), especially creation science concepts. That information was NEVER taught in any of my hs or college courses!
I’ve always reminded myself on bad days, when the yellow school bus looks inviting, that if my kids were going to public school, I’d be doing the same teaching, just in the evening, as I’d be helping them with homework and with concepts they didn’t understand and the teacher didn’t have the time to really explain to them, plus undoing all the “socialization” they dealt with and picked up over the course of the day.