Our homeschool curriculum
Sharing more about Pโs homeschool curriculum and how we structure our days. For more about why we decided to homeschool, check out this post.
Hi friends! How are you? I hope that youโre having a wonderful morning. I have a couple of client calls today, homeschool fun, and weโre going to take an afternoon hike. What are you up to?
For todayโs post, I wanted to chat more about how we structure our days now that weโre in week 3 of homeschooling. Itโs worth mentioning here that every day is different and these are just boxes we check each day. The beauty of homeschool is that itโs flexible. It takes far less time than traditional school, and you have the freedom to pause, change things, or move things around, depending on whatโs going on.
Itโs also worth mentioning here that Iโm NOT an expert and have minimal experience in this area. Iโm the newb of the newbies and am seriously figuring this out as we go. Iโm so so thankful that there are homeschool experts out there and friends who have offered with help and advice; Iโll take all the tips I can get!
Iโm also SO thankful to Brittany from A Healthy Slice of Life who jumped in, hopped on the phone with me when I sent her a super long voice message, talked me off the ledge, and helped me figure out a gameplan. Check out her blog for homeschool info, recipes, travel, and lifestyle – she is amazing.
Even though Iโm still figuring this out, I wanted to share this post for my friends out there who are considering homeschool, but are super intimidated, just as I was. I thought Iโd have to be a *teacher* to be good at this. You donโt need to have a teaching background. You just need to find the right curriculum fit (and know you can change at any time), have a little patience and flexibility, and continue to show love and patience to your kiddo. <3
Our homeschool curriculum and how we structure our days
For the most part, hereโs how the day goes:
We wake up and take Liv to school. We come home, P has breakfast, I give her a little bit of chill time where she can play with toys, puzzles, build things, etc. (this is where Iโll catch up on a few emails or put out work fires) and we start *school* at 9. I sit at the table with her and eat my breakfast as we work together.
Almost all of the curriculum weโre using is plug and play, which means you open the book, read the lesson, answer the questions, and move on. (Almost everything below was recommended by Brittany)
Math- 20-30 minutes
Weโre using Nicole the Math Lady and Saxon Math. We used to use Saxon math at the girlsโ school (they had switched to Math in Focus) and I knew I wanted to go back to Saxon. Nicole the Math Lady teaches each lesson (about a 10 minute video with a corny brain break, which P loves) and then you have practice questions and 1-2 worksheets to complete. You input the kidsโ answers into the computer and it tracks their grades. Each lesson takes us about 2 days to complete.
Grammar -20-30 minutes
For grammar, weโre using Masterbooks, which is a faith-based curriculum. It includes picture study, memorization, punctuation, spelling, vocabulary, observation, poems, psalms, letters, and practical application through creative writing. We just started but I feel like sheโs already learned a lot from this textbook. She learned cursive this year, so sheโs working on answering the questions in cursive.
Writing – 20-30 minutes
For writing, weโre doing the Fables, Myths and Fairy Tales writing lessons from IEW. It focuses on their Structure and Style method. Right now, sheโs working on reading fables, making key outlines, and narration (being able to retell the story using her notes).
Reading – 20 minutes
I just want her to enjoy reading for now, so weโre reading something super lighthearted and fun together. This book has held the test of time and she LOVES it. Weโre both often cracking up at some point while reading about Fudge and his antics.
Science + Social Studies / Geography – about 2x per week each
Iโm still trying to figure out a plan for this, but not so worried about it since weโre close to summer. For now, sheโs working on memorizing the states, capitals, and being able to locate them on a map.
For science, we do one project each week. The first week, we dissected owl pellets, matched the bones on the bone sorting charts, and talked about what we found. Week 2, she constructed an egg drop that we could drop from the balcony to the yard while keeping the egg intact. We talked about velocity, gravity, momentum, action and reaction. This week, sheโs working on constructing a roller coaster.
Since weโre just planning on homeschooling until 5th grade, Iโm going to reach out to Livโs school to see what the expectations are for rising 5th graders for science and social studies/geography so I can make sure we cover the bases.
Mid-day:
We take Maisey for a walk and have lunch together, catch up on a couple of chores, and figure out a plan for the afternoon.
Afternoon:
When we made this decision, I told P that I loved hanging out with her but couldnโt be her cruise director all day. In the afternoon before we pick up Liv, Iโll have coaching calls, content creation, editing, podcast interviews, whatever I need to do work-wise for a couple of hours. Iโve also shifted my work schedule so Iโm working more on the weekends or when the Pilot is home from airline training. (We started all of this when he left, so Iโve been solo parenting and figuring all of this out along the way.) Saturday is a work blitz day now, and most of Sunday. Besides Pโs basketball game, Iโll write/work/edit pretty much all day until dinner.
In the afternoon, sheโll play with toys, work on something she enjoys (music, crocheting, shooting hoops, etc), and if Iโm caught up with work, Iโll take her to an indoor play place, to run errands, and sometimes Iโll give her some screen time. Since she has basketball at night and weโre chasing around with Liv to dance classes, she usually doesnโt get screen time in the evenings.
The days shuffle around. Sometimes Iโll have an appointment in the morning, or teach a barre class, so we do school in the afternoon, and weโre also exploring some of the Tucson homeschool activities. There are so many great ones here: parkour, gymnastics, art, co-ops, horse lessons, music โ Iโm excited to check them out!
So thatโs how itโs going for now! Iโm sure it will change over time and my plan is to get her caught up with math (sheโs finishing the third grade book now and Iโm hoping to get 4th grade and most of 5th done next year while sheโs in 4th grade). The other books are 4th grade books, so weโll just move up to 5th when she completes them.
Homeschool allows you to meet the kid where they are. If theyโre progressing quickly in a subject, you can progress along with them, or take more time on certain subjects if they need it.
If you have any ideas for fun science projects or any social studies and geography resources, Iโd appreciate it so much! Also, if there are any questions I can answer in future posts, please lmk!
xoxo
Gina
OMG I totally forgot all about Saxon math!!! I was homeschooled a million years ago and my mom used Saxon for us. I’m now an avionics engineer so I guess it worked! haha. Glad to hear homeschooling is going well!
it’s a classic for a reason!! and lol I guess it worked! this style really clicks with P’s brain, so I’m glad we were able to bring it back
Thank you for sharing your homeschool journey with us! I always enjoy seeing curriculum and getting new ideas, one of which is the owl puke which my kids will love! For social studies we have used Not Grass and have enjoyed the read alouds that go along with it. BJU Press also has a social studies curriculum we have used and is more of a traditional curriculum. Science we have been picking a few science units from the Good and Beautiful to go through each year. They arenโt too involved but have kept our interest. Also we have used Apologia Zoology which was interesting.