Safety and trust
Country and travel records
A practical record frame for homeschooling, worldschooling, expat, and digital-nomad families moving across rules, languages, and calendars.
Start with the family's anchor place
Every family needs one record anchor: the country, state, region, school relationship, or umbrella program that actually governs the child's paperwork. SchoolQuest AI can store learning evidence, but parents should keep a separate note naming the authority, reporting dates, required subjects, language expectations, and the adult responsible for checking updates.
Keep a portable weekly evidence bundle
A travel-friendly week should include one core academic signal, one reading or writing sample, one world-context or local observation, one science or project artifact, one life-readiness note, and one short parent reflection. That bundle can travel between homes, countries, tutors, schools, or future evaluations without pretending to be an official transcript.
Portable record checklist
Before exporting or sharing records, parents can keep one simple checklist that names the administrative anchor, connects the week's learning to evidence, and separates practical learning proof from country-specific compliance.
- Anchor: country, state, region, umbrella school, reporting calendar, and responsible adult.
- Weekly bundle: core skill, reading or writing sample, world-context note, science/project artifact, and parent reflection.
- Travel note: place, dates, local observation, language context, and any learning-plan change.
- Export boundary: portfolio PDFs show learning evidence, not an official transcript or legal guarantee.
Separate learning records from legal compliance
SchoolQuest AI should help parents see what the child practiced, understood, built, revised, and explained. It should not tell a family that a country, state, school, immigration office, or examination board will accept a record. Before using the app for real compliance, families should verify local rules with qualified local sources.
