Monday, August 11, 2025

High School German with UCScout On Demand

I've written about our journey to German citizenship for my wife and our children. Yet merely having a German passport, Passdeutsche, isn't our goal: we want our children to be able to function comfortably in Europe if they choose to do so at any point in their lives. That means learning to speak German conversationally, if not fluently.

Two of our kids are in High School. My school in Missouri lo these many years ago offered French, Spanish, and German, but times and school funding levels were different back then. Our High School now offers Spanish — the most widely used language in California after English, but we'd prefer they use this time to learn German instead.

Last year we started taking an online German course from UCScout, which is run by the University of California. The UCScout On Demand courses are self-paced but have an instructor available to assist, grade assignments, and conduct sessions in German. The On Demand courses cost $399 per semester, are accredited high school courses, and meet California's A-G requirements.

We have opted out of the Spanish class offered at school and instead enrolled in the UCScout German course, for 10th and 11th grade so far. At the end of each two semester course UCScout sends a report which our school incorporates into their regular transcript. There won't be a separate report card for the German classes when they apply for admission to college, it will all be part of their High School transcript.

A gothic building with a huge animatronic clockThis has worked out quite well for us. During the school year they use the hour which would have otherwise been the Spanish class to work on their German. They've also taken a class over each of the last two summers while we were in Germany. Being able to work on their own schedule lets them do the classwork in the evenings after we're done for the day.

If you choose to do something like this, start early. It took the entire first year of high school to get agreement that the kids would be allowed to drop Spanish and take German instead. It helped that the school had used UCScout during the pandemic to offer their Spanish course, they already had a way to incorporate the grades into their system.