Study Hall
Some schools implement “floating” study halls, where the availability of study halls depends on what teachers and subjects assigned homework that day.
Study hall as we used to know it was a designated period within a larger public school setting where students engage in quiet independent study, catch up on school work, and complete assignments. It would be supervised by a public school teacher or teachers aid.
Today study halls can be set up in churches or in homes. This is a form of independent study for homeschooled children to receive additional support from an onsite teacher who can help or guide them in their existing studies. Parents might drop off their children at these study halls one or two days a week for quiet independent study. Study halls do not qualify as a true one-room school method because they do not provide group learning and collaboration nor does the teacher provide curriculum.
A church with onsite homeschool group meetings may conduct a study hall or learning center.