Free Editable High School Transcript Template

Question: How do I make an “official” transcript for my homeschooler?

We’ve had a time, trying to get our “home schooled” kids set up for work, or drivers licenses, because the businesses want a school ID that is “legal like a public school ID” or our documents do not have an official seal, etc. Have you ever had this problem? Do you make ID’s for your kids? I used your free printable high school transcript, which is great, but since I didn’t type the copy and there was no official public school seal, they shied away from it.

Monday Mailbag Q&A

Answer: Maybe these tweaks will help

We haven’t had any trouble of that sort, but my transcripts are typed rather than penned in by hand. See if using this one will help:

High School Transcript Template - Fully Editable PDF

Maybe this will help. I converted my original transcript file to this editable PDF. So now you can fill out the form on your computer before printing. That way, it will look more “official.”

To use our free editable high school transcript, follow these simple steps:

  1. Download our editable transcript file to your computer
  2. Adjust the display size to 100%
  3. Fill in the information: name, address, coursework, and grades
  4. Save your completed form under a different name (that way, you’ll still have the blank master to use for future students)

Going the Extra Mile

We haven’t done so when applying for driver’s permits, but for college admissions, we normally do have the kids’ high school transcripts notarized. You might try that, too, if the DPS or potential employers still shy away from the printed copy of your student’s transcript. It isn’t difficult to do this. If you don’t already know somebody who can notarize the transcript, do a Google search to find a notary public in your area.

This is totally optional, but I also ordered a seal embosser with the name of our homeschool on it, which I used on both transcripts and diplomas. It adds a nice touch, and with the number of children we have, it will see a good amount of use by the time we finish this homeschool journey!

You can get similar seals for about $25 on Amazon, and it can be used over and over again. (I bought extra plates for stamping books from our home library and monograming envelope flaps. They are easily interchangeable, so it’s easy to imprint different seal styles using the same embosser.)

As for student IDs, after 25 years of homeschooling, I finally printed and laminated “official” IDs for the first time last year. (Primarily, so we could use them when buying movie tickets for school-aged children over 12 and not have to pay adult prices for them.)

I designed our IDs myself using Pages on my Mac. They include each student’s name, photo, and school year, plus the logo from our local homeschool support group. If I figure out how to make an editable template for those, I’ll upload that to this site, as well.

In the meantime, if you haven’t already done so, I suggest you read this post. It’s all about making the most of the high school years.

Have your high schoolers read it, too! It explains how they can earn college credit for as much of their coursework as possible. Some of ours used these tips to rack up as many as 60 credit hours before ever graduating high school. That’s a huge savings of both time and money!

Hope all that helps!

More graduation resources

Check out a few of our other posts on this topic:

One more resource that deserves a mention is Summit Student Conferences. This 2-week worldview program teaches young people how to defend their faith in a culture that is increasingly hostile to Christianity.

Summit Student Conferences

UPDATE: Are you interested in sending your teen or young adult (ages 16-22) to a Summit Student Conference? You can save $200 off your 2024 registration with the code SUMMITFAMILY. Registration is already open, so apply now!

Back-to-School Print Pack

Download 74 of my prettiest, most popular, and/or never-before published back-to-school resources in a single print pack. The updated Back-to-School Survival Guide includes schedules, charts, calendars, and day planners to help make this school year your best yet!

Back-to-School-Print-Pack-Ad

PLEASE NOTE: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase through any of those links, we may receive a small referral fee, at no extra cost to you. Such fees help defray the cost of running this website. This, in turn, allows us to continue offering our readers a wealth of FREE printable resources. So thank you for your support!

Free Editable High School Transcript

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61 Comments

Tiffany says:

First, I am so thankful to have found this form!! Second, I am wondering how I should fill this out for our high school student who has only been home-schooled for 11th & now this year 12th grade? I have the transcript from the previous school, so I am wondering if I need to combine them into one form or if I just fill out the grades that were completed at home. Thanks much!

Jennifer Flanders says:

That’s a great question! I would combine the two transcripts by copying the coursework and grades for his freshman and sophomore years onto your master transcript, then adding in the grades from his junior and senior years at home. You can keep the school’s transcript for backup, but I doubt anybody will ever ask to see it. I routinely add grades from co-op classes and dual credit coursework to my kids’ high school transcripts right alongside independent studies, CLEP exam credits, and the coursework I teach them at home. Your final transcript is just a listing of all the credits earned during the high school years, not some kind of affidavit asserting you personally taught every course.

Lisa says:

Thank you for this! Just started homeschooling last November. My son starts high school in the fall and I’m a little nervous about navigating it. But this is tremendously helpful.

Jennifer Flanders says:

I’m so glad to hear it, Lisa. As a 35+ year homeschool veteran, I can assure you that God equips us to do what He calls us to do and will grant wisdom to all who ask for it!

Annie says:

Thank you SOOOO MUCH!! I’m looking at dual enrollment at our community college next year for my oldest’s senior year, and they require a printed high school transcript showing how the dual credit classes will fit into the high school transcript. I was so overwhelmed. With your template I was able to produce a coherent, impressive-looking transcript in about 20 minutes, showing classes in progress and projected Dual Credit classes for next year.

Jennifer Flanders says: I’m happy to share, Annie, and am glad you found it so helpful! Beth says:

I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for making and sharing this template for us homeschoolers! It’s very efficient and good-looking file. Saved me a *lot* of time and energy.

Missy says:

Under the 1st semester and 2nd semester column are you to put a letter grade (using the grading scale) or credit earned? TIA

Jennifer Flanders says:

I put letter grades under the 1st semester, 2nd semester, and final grade columns, Missy, then use the last column to record total credit earned for the class. I award half a credit for a 1-semester class like driver’s ed or government and a full credit for full-year classes like algebra or biology. So, by way of example, if my child made an 88 in world history in the fall and brought his score up to 96 in the spring, for a final grade of 92, I’d write “B” in the first column, “A” in the second and third, and “1” in the credit column.

Kristen says:

What do I write for the school information and the administration etc? Just my name and the same address as the student etc?

Jennifer Flanders says:

Yes. That’s exactly what I do, Kristen, although we gave our homeschool a name, so that is what I use on the school name line, but I list myself as the administrator and sign it in the box provided.

Paula Doughton says: Oh wow. You are amazing. Thank you so much! Jennifer Flanders says: You are so welcome Paula. I love your enthusiasm! Martha Perry says:

You are my favourite person on the planet right now. Thank you for blessing all of us with the transcript template.

Jennifer Flanders says:

Well, this is my favorite comment on the blog right now, so I guess that makes us even, Martha! And you’re welcome. ❤️

Gina says: Hi, can I save this into google docs? Jennifer Flanders says:

I don’t use google docs much, Gina, but I suggest you use a 2-step process: Save the PDF to your computer, then upload it from there to google docs.

Kelly says: Thank you! This makes it so easy. Jennifer Flanders says: Happy to help, Kelly! Lisa Dorsett says:

Thank you so much for this awesome transcript. I will be using this one for both of my high schoolers!

Jennifer Flanders says: Glad to hear it, Lisa. And I’m happy to share! Jessica says:

Thank you so much Mrs. Flanders! After much researching online this has, by far, been the most simple and explanatory transcript and information I’ve come across. God bless you and your family ❤️
Jessica H.

Jennifer Flanders says: You’re very welcome, Jessica. I’m so glad you found it helpful! Sara Souza says: Just wanted to thank you for the transcript! I couldn’t have done it without you <3 Jennifer Flanders says: You’re welcome, Sara. I’m so glad you found it helpful! C says: I’m curious where the seal goes on the transcript? Could you show a sample? Thank you! Jennifer Flanders says:

I don’t have a picture handy, but mine is just an embossing seal (so it doesn’t cover up anything), and I normally position it in the lower right hand corner. When I need to submit a notarized transcript, my notary puts her stamp and seal in the bottom margin.

Aurelio Mikrot says: Thanks for sharing Jennifer Flanders says: You’re welcome. I’m happy to help! Jennifer says:

I filled out the editable transcript on my computer, however when I print it its warped with the lines not lining up or the words. I did not hit enter at all or disturb the lines in anyway. Please Help

Jennifer Flanders says:

I don’t know why the file is misbehaving for you. I’ve filled it in here and printed it out no problem. Maybe try saving it to your desktop before filling in the blanks and printing from there? Sometimes when I’ve tried to print other PDFs directly from the download page, it only prints the part displayed on the screen instead of the entire file. Maybe you’re experiencing a similar problem? Let me know if that gets it to work for you!

Terri Orr says: I just wanted to thank you for the transcript! Jennifer Flanders says: You’re very welcome, Terri! Emily says:

Thank you so much for writing this post, it has definitely helped get our oldest into college 🙂 However, while we did educate our oldest in a way that was easily transferable into credits and courses, I am not sure how to do that with my second oldest, who will be attending the community college as long as we can provide an official transcript. After our oldest left for college, we decided to change the way we homeschooled. We focused on a path that was dedicated to God instead of academics, and we didn’t homeschool our second oldest in a way that was subject-based. Instead, we chose to teach her Christian morals and values that would help her throughout life. The problem I have right now is that I can’t really put together a transcript as I didn’t teach her common subjects such as Math and English. I contacted the community college and they were unhelpful about it, and just told us to provide them a transcript by March or else she would no longer be able to go to college in the fall. I know that your situation isn’t the same as ours, but I am at ends here. Do you have any ideas on how we would be able to provide a transcript?

Jennifer Flanders says:

I am SO SORRY for the delayed response, Emily. I thought I had already answered you. I got a slew of questions in quick succession from homeschooling readers about filling out high school transcripts, and yours slipped through the cracks. I just emailed you some information that may be helpful, including ideas on awarding credit for life experience and non-traditional education. If you know longer need any of that information, just delete.

Barbie Bassett says:

Your transcript is PERFECT. I need more lines for courses, tho. I really want to use your ediable template. Is there any way to add more lines?

Jennifer Flanders says:

I’ve had requests for several tweaks that I plan to incorporate in an updated file soon. Will make a note to add more lines when I do. ?

Sharon Rogerson says:

Hi,
When I have the transcript notarized, what is the notary notarizing? I hope that makes sense.
When I take a form camp medical form to a notary, they are notarizing my signature basically
stating that I’m the person who signed the form. So what is being notarized on the transcript?
If it’s my signature, why would the college care or is it just another way of making the form more
legitimate. Thanks for your help.

Jennifer Flanders says:

Yes, Sharon. Your question makes perfect sense. And it is indeed your signature that the notary is notarizing. I wouldn’t bother with this step if it were just for appearance sake; the colleges my kids have attended required an “official high school transcript.” When I emailed the digital file to them, they requested I have my student deliver a notarized hard copy, so that is what we’ve done ever since.

Lana says:

Hi, thank you so much for making this template and making it editable! Is there a way to change the heading from High School Academic Transcript to Official High School Transcript? I was unable to change that part of the transcript but I love the transcript, just need it to say official.

Jennifer Flanders says: Yes, Lana. I will try to do that and post the updated file soon! Kelly Purcell says:

Hello,
Is the Homeschool Academic Transcript template you share here on this page, considered an “official high school transcript?”
I am just wondering because it doesn’t say “Official” on it. I have seen other transcripts with the word ‘official” on them, so I wanted to know if it literally had to be that specific. I really like your template, so I would like to use it, I’m just not sure if it is considered “Official”. Please get back to me. Thanks.
Kelly Purcell
Jacksonville, Fl 2021

Jennifer Flanders says:

Sorry for the delayed response, Kelly. I’ve sent 9 to college using this transcript, and none of the schools ever questioned it. I did have to send a notarized copy, though. Nevertheless, I’ve gotten several requests to add “official” to the title… so maybe other schools require it. So I will tweak the original and post an updated file soon.

SS says:

I am trying to work with this template and the information I type is really low and can’t be seen. Is there something I am doing wrong?

Jennifer Flanders says:

I don’t know. I downloaded it myself and tested it again, and it all looks fine. If you are able to check the parameters on your font size and color, you may be able to make adjustments there to ensure the type is visible. Also, make certain you aren’t hitting the return button before you start to type, as that would bump the text down a line where it couldn’t be seen. Readers? Has anyone else had trouble using this template? Did you find a solution or work-around to it? Whether you did or you didn’t, please chime in and tell me. I’d like to know how widespread this problem is.

Deborah says:

I just used it and it lined up and printed just fine. I didn’t have to change anything in my settings. Thanks for sharing this!
Deborah

Jennifer Flanders says: So glad to hear it, Deborah. Thanks for letting me know! may says:

Hello, I am looking to make a transcript for my daughter and I am finding it to be
very overwhelming and confusing. I have been homeschooling my daughter since she was in 2nd grade.
She is now graduating homeschool and looking into colleges…
I am finding it very difficult to create a transcript for her for college.
I live in Ohio and I am not sure how many credits she needs to get into college,
I am having trouble understanding GPA and all that.
I just happened to run across your website and you seem like the only person who would understand my struggle.
If you have any information to help me at all it would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you so so much. May.

Jennifer Flanders says:

Hi, May I know it can be a little overwhelming the first time around, but maybe I can simplify it a little for you. I’ll try to break down the process I use in awarding credit to my high schoolers. Then hopefully you can adapt those ideas to your own situation. Every student is different, and requirements for each state differ slightly as well. Here are a couple of links for what Texas public schools require of their graduates to make them competitive for college. Ohio may not do things exactly the same way, but it will probably be close. You can begin here, or Google search “high school graduation requirements in Ohio” to search for a similar document for your home state. ➡️ tea.texas.gov/Graduation_Toolkit_Summer2019 (page 5, in particular, is user friendly)
➡️ tea.state.tx.us/rules (this one is more detailed — all options are listed, but you’ll need to scroll through the bulk of the document to read through them) On page 5 of that first link, you’ll find a chart that lists the number of credits required for graduation in each of several different subjects. These include: ✅ English (4 credits)
✅ Mathematics (3 credits)
✅ Science (3 credits)
✅ History (2 credits)
✅ U.S.Government(1/2 credit)
✅ Economics(1/2 credit)
✅ Languages Other Than English (2 credits)
✅ Physical Education (1 credit)
✅ Fine Arts (1 credit)
✅ Electives (5 credits) Students earn credits for successfully completing a course of study. Normally, courses that last a full school year receive 1 credit, while those the last only one semester get 1/2 credits. In Texas, students are required to earn a minimum of 22 credits to qualify for graduation. In preparing my own children’s transcripts, I award credit according to the following criteria: ? traditional schooling – I award 1 full credit when we complete a traditional textbook, such as Saxon Algebra 1 or Apologia Biology or Bob Jones American History. I give them the full year’s credit, even if it takes us less than a year to finish. For instance, if my child does two math lessons a day and finishes in half the time, he still gets full credit for the course. I also give him credit whether he studies the subject at home, at co-op, or on a college campus as a dual-credit course.
? independent study – sometimes my kids study a subject on their own, such as psychology or economics, in order to take a CLEP test on it. If they learn the material well enough to pass the CLEP exam, I award them credit on the high school transcript – half a credit if the CLEP awards 3 hours of college credit, and a full credit if the CLEP is worth 6-8 hours of college credit.
? life experience – I also award credit on my kids’ high school credits for extra curricular involvement. For instance, one son played basketball with a local private school for three seasons. I gave him 1/2 a PE credit for each semester he played. Another son trained for (and successfully completed) a half-iron man race, so I awarded him a PE credit for that. Several of my children have taken piano lessons, and I’ve awarded them a Fine Arts credit for that. I gave my kids who spent summers volunteering at the hospital a 1/2 elective credit in first aid. One of my sons built three stone patios on our property and spent several weeks preparing and planting flowerbeds on our property, so I gave him 1 elective credit in landscape and design. Please note that high school credits are different than grades. The credits tell how much time a student has devoted to a particular course of study. Grades tell how well they mastered the material covered in that course. The GPA is an average of the grades your student makes divided by the hours he’s spent in class. For my graduates, I calculate the GPA based on the following scale: A (90-100%) = 4.0
B (80-89%) = 3.0
C (70-79%) = 2.0
D (65-69%) = 1.0
F (64% or below) = 0.0 To calculate the GPA, I add the number of grade points received times each credit awarded, then divide by the total number of credits earned during that school year. (So if my student received 4 As and 2 Bs taking 6 credits worth of classes, her GPA would be < [(4 x 4.0) + (2 x 3.0)] / 6 >= [ (16.0 + 6.0) / 6 ] = ( 22.0 / 6 ) = 3.67 GPA You should be aware, though, that some schools now use a 5.0 scale instead of a 4.0 in calculating the GPA, and others set stricter definitions for what qualifies as an A, B, C, etc. So mine is not certainly not the only way (or even the best way) to calculate GPA. It has, however, successfully gotten all my graduates (so far) into college. So hopefully, it will work for you, too. 🙂

Kim Pritchard says:

What a blessing you have been to me! Thank you for such a great resource and easy to understand directions! God bless you!