November 21, 2024

How to Homeschool: Homeschooling Methods, Curriculum, and Resources

How to Homeschool: Homeschooling Methods, Curroculum, and Resources www.girlfriendscoffeehour.com #homeschool

When I first began homeschooling I knew nothing about methods used for homeschooling.  My model was the school system and that is really all I knew!  I happened to find a curriculum the first year, for my daughter, which used a Charlotte Mason approach.  We loved it! Living books…Christ-centered…what more could I want?

This week I’m going to list some links to different methods of homeschooling, list some of the curriculum that we have used and recommend, as well as share a few resources that I still find helpful today!

Homeschooling methods

1. Charlotte Mason

What is the Charlotte Mason method?

Simply Charlotte Mason

Heart of Dakota Publishing

Ambleside Online

Living Books Curriculum

Lifetime Books & Gifts

The Charlotte Mason Way: A brand new consulting site for those interested in learning how to best implement the Charlotte Mason method in their homeschool.

2. Unschooling

What is unschooling?

Sandra Dodd

The Natural Child Project

3. Unit Studies

What is a Unit Study?

Unit Studies by Amanda Bennett

Homeschool in the Woods

4. Classical

Classical Education

Classical Homeschooling

Classical Conversations

5. Notebooking

Tutorial: What is notebooking?

Notebooking Pages

The Notebooking Fairy

6. Eclectic

What Exactly is Eclectic Homeschooling?

All of the above listed methods and many others could be used within this method of ‘eclectic’ homeschooling!

Of course, there are also other methods of homeschooling. I’ve listed just a few to start.

Favorite homeschool curricula & providers:

Apologia

The Prairie Primer

Heart of Dakota

Music 4 Little Learners

Teaching Textbooks

Polka Dot Publishing: Life of Fred

Learning Adventures

Media Angels, Inc.

Character Concepts

Lifestyle of Learning

Other recommended resources:

Unschooling Rules, Clark Aldrich

Charlotte Mason Companion, Karen Andreola

The Simplicity of Homeschooling, Vicki Goodchild

The Unschooling Handbook, Mary Griffith

The Relaxed Homeschool, Mary Hood

Wading Through the Lists

Now, this is quite a long list of companies and resources for you to work through.  My suggestion is that you begin with the homeschooling methods.  If you are new to homeschooling, or maybe you just feel you need a change, reading about the different methods will help you to figure out what kind of homeschooler you are, or perhaps the kind you would like to be.  After that, you may want to begin searching through the various other links for curriculum companies and other books and resources I’ve listed.  All of the listed curriculum and resources following are items I have used in our homeschool at some time over the last 7 years.  Many of them are favorites, such as the unschooling handbook.  Even if you have no interest in becoming an unschooler, I highly recommend this book.  It is a wonderful resource and will get you thinking about what learning can actually look like!

I do hope you have found this list of homechooling methods, curriculum, and resources helpful. Please take time to sort through them. It will be worth it, I promise!

Be sure to come back next week. I’m planning to discuss Homeschool Field Trips.

HOW do I Homeschool?

The answers to this question are infinite. There are hundreds of ways to educate your children at  home! Curriculum companies and learning resources now abound, unlike the days when the idea of home education was foreign to most parents and educators alike. Today I will tell you just a bit about how we have approached homeschooling in our family.

HOW Do I Homeschool? www.GirlfriendsCoffeeHour.com #homeschool

A View of Homeschooling in my Family

When our family began our homeschooling journey, we were still in a very schoolish place. We were coming straight out of a private school and I expected to do school at home. I did not have anyone telling me that it could or should look any differently. So I began my search for appropriate curriculum for my children on the internet. I ended up going with a workbook type of program for my son and a Charlotte Mason, kind of a *unit study program, for my daughter.

*Click on the link for a thorough explanation of the term unit study, but this is basically studying a particular topic or time period for a specified amount of time before moving on to a different topic or time period.

“A good unit study involves learning about one topic in an interesting and engaging way that will captivate the student and make them want to learn more and continue to think about the things that they are learning.” ~Amanda Bennett

Neither I nor my son enjoyed the workbooks. I did not like the separation that it created and he didn’t either. We both felt that he was missing out on what was happening with my daughter and I. We loved the unit study! I learned alongside my daughter and I was able to see the world that opened up to her through learning to read and in being read to daily by me.

By the end of our first year of homeschooling I knew that we were not a workbook family.

We ended up using another unit study curriculum with both children the following year, and I actually included our youngest child when possible, too. It was a wonderful year! It involved a lot of work, and our home still seemed like a school many days, but we all relished our afternoon reading and Q & A times. There were days when I would choke up from the stories I was reading aloud to them, and I was so proud of my children for their participation. We all learned so much that year!

It was a time of growth for me in particular, as we had moved that year and were living  in an area where we knew absolutely no one. Our reliance on God grew. I was also learning more about what homeschooling could be. Many families love and thrive with school-at-home methods. That is wonderful! For us, it did not work well. It simply was not what I desired for my family, nor did I feel it was what God was calling me to. Near the end of my first year of homeschooling I had acquired a few booklets from Lifestyle of Learning. Little did I know it at the time, but the words within those pages would spark a change in my thinking that has grown and changed over the last 7 years. My thoughts about education are very different from what they were when I first began this journey. And God is still changing me as we continue.

Though we are not a ‘workbook’ family, that is not to say that we never use workbooks or textbooks. We have, and do. It really depends on the child, the season of our lives, and the topic about which we are trying to learn. For example, we moved and added two babies to our family between March of 2009 and October of 2010.  During that time my children did a lot of learning on their own, and used several textbooks to facilitate their learning. I didn’t even always keep up with the grading. You want to know what happened? They still excelled on their end-of-year tests! Big surprise. I can say that now, as I am more ‘seasoned’, but in the earlier years of this journey those were things that I worried about. They are valid concerns to new homechooling parents. I want to encourage you that your children are learning, even on the days when it may not seem that way. There are a multitude of ways to learn and things to learn about. Most of them are not even learned sitting at  desk listening to a lecture! So when you have a day, or even several, that you think “all is lost” and that you need to make it up, do not despair. God redeems the time!

Our family is living proof.

Now that we are entering our 8th year of homeschooling, we are planning and preparing a bit differently for our homeschooling year than we did in years past. For the first time, I asked my children what they wanted to learn about and actually ordered resources based on their answers! We will be watching dvd’s as part of our family learning this year. The topics are as varied as cooking, crafting a great sentence, and nutrition. My older three children are taking art classes each Friday at the local homeschool co-op; my younger daughters will tag along and learn to be patient while we wait on their siblings. My children will also meet new friends, play games, help prepare lunches, take care of younger siblings, continue to help maintain our home, enjoy movies and video games, utilize apps on the iPad, write posts for their own blogs, and participate in field trips and park days planned by one of the other homeschool groups in which we are involved. This is all a part of learning!

It is how we homeschool.

Next week  I will share a bit about various homeschooling methods, curriculum, and other useful resources. I hope you will join me to learn more about HOW to homeschool with Homeschooling Methods, Curriculum, and Resources.