The Carnegie Unit, established in 1906, created the standard that one high school credit equals 120 clock hours of instruction in a single subject. This measurement was designed to standardize high school education across the United States, and it remains the most commonly cited benchmark for credit assignment in homeschooling.
In practice, 120 hours translates to roughly 45 to 60 minutes of instruction per day, five days per week, for a 36 to 40 week school year. Public schools calculate credits differently (using class periods rather than hours), but the 120-hour benchmark gives homeschool families a concrete, defensible standard for credit assignment.
Not all hours need to look the same. Reading a textbook, completing worksheets, conducting experiments, writing essays, watching educational documentaries, participating in field trips, and having guided discussions all count as instructional hours. The key is that the activity is meaningfully educational and related to the subject.
Some courses naturally accumulate more than 120 hours. A rigorous AP course might require 150 to 180 hours of study. An intensive lab science with weekly experiments might reach 160 hours. In these cases, the course still earns 1.0 credit (or sometimes 1.5 for courses with separate lab components). The extra hours reflect rigor, not extra credit.
Partial credits are common and accepted. A semester course of 60 hours earns 0.5 credit. A quarter course of 30 hours earns 0.25 credit. And a year-long intensive of 240 hours across two years might earn 2.0 credits spread over those years.