I’ve shared intimate details of my birth stories, revealed the dark side of blogging, and exposed the extent of my crunchiness writing about menstrual cups…
I haven’t written much about homeschooling, even though it is a big part of my family’s life, because I didn’t think it would interest most of you.
When a picture of our homeschool room became the most popular picture I’ve shared on Instagram, many of you asked details about specific parts of the picture, so I decided to write about our homeschool classroom.
Don’t Homeschool?
I hope that some of the tips in this post will be helpful to you, even if your kids are not taught at home.
I have two children who are technically under “school-age,” and many of the things I have in our school room are there to engage their creativity and keep them busy while the older kids learn. These activities would be helpful for children who aren’t of school age yet, but still want to be involved in the learning process.
My Homeschool Classroom Philosophy
One of the many reasons we decided to homeschool our children is that we felt we could give them a more detailed and diverse education than they could get in a typical school system.
In short, my philosophy is that learning happens 24/7 with children, and that while we might focus on specific topics during certain parts of the day, we teach them all the time.
We tie in aspects of the Montessori teaching method, along with a couple of traditional learning curriculums (this one and this one are the two we’re currently using) and many hands-on activities and field trips. While I love the Montessori philosophy, we spend a great deal of time outside in the treehouse, going for walks, and playing than sitting in the classroom whenever we can. We also try to allow the children to have some autonomy in choosing the specific activities that they do and the subjects they learn first each day.
We also incorporate travel into our learning whenever possible, as children learn much more from visiting a place or culture than they could from simply reading about it.
So while I love our little school room, I also really love the time we spend learning outside of it.
Setting Up Our Homeschool Classroom
As we prepare to begin school this year and I set up the classroom, I’m sharing my personal homeschool ideas, so I hope you’ll share yours in the comments so we can all learn from each other.
Our homeschool room reflects the diversity of learning methods we use and the diversity of ages we teach. My children are all currently under 10 years of age, so obviously, a much different environment would be needed for older children.
I followed the idea of “Workstations” that is popular in Montessori schools in setting up our classroom. My goal was to have different stations that my children could rotate to and each have their own space for independent learning.
These are the “Stations” we have and how we use them:
- Jumping station: I’ve found that especially for active boys, movement actually improves learning, rather than stifling it. In fact, sitting for too long in one place quickly makes them bored and inattentive, while being able to move helps them focus. I’ve used rebounding for health for years, and I love that kids can use it as an indoor exercise while learning (and this builds on the Montessori idea that movement enhances cognition). We mainly use the mini-trampoline (or rebounder) to let them jump while we read, teach a lesson, or while quizzing them on spelling, multiplication tables, etc. It is also a great place for them to move around during breaks, especially when it is raining outside.
- Reading Station: Pictured above in the top image in this post, the reading station is a little area with three beanbags for sitting on to read. This is used for independent reading or studying and is a good break from sitting in chairs.
- The Little Kids Station: The favorite spot of the under 5 crowd, this mini-table is a refurbished old coffee table that lost a leg and that we rescued and refurbished. The top has a ledge so small pieces won’t fall off, and the surface is covered in chalkboard contact paper so that they can practice writing on the table itself. This is one of two stations specifically for the little kids and the chairs are mini-sized as well. See more detail below for the specific activities we have at this table.
- School Cabinet and Teacher Station: We found that having the school books in an open space where the kids could access them at all times led to little kids trying to learn like the big kids by becoming interested in books. Our solution was an old cabinet (technically a kitchen island) that we found at a salvage store. We installed child locks on the doors and now each child has a cubby inside the cabinet for books. We open it during school and return the books after school time. This also minimizes the mess. The top of the station is home to teacher supplies, our school plant and some flash cards. See more detail below.
- The Workbook Station: The older children take turns working at this table with one of us at a time, and while we try not to sit for very long, a table is a great place for the necessary book work or test.
- Artwork Display: A friend made these adorable artwork display boards and they help keep a handle on the amount of precious artwork on the walls at any given time. Each child has one “clip” and can display a piece of artwork or something they’ve worked on in school that week. It is just a board with some heavy metal clips that say “Look What I Did..”
- Learning Station Storage: I list some of our specific learning stations below, but these bins contain sets of flash cards, beading activities for little ones, lacing cards, art supplies, and Montessori learning stations. We also keep the few toys that we have in these bins (legos, blocks, etc).
- Little Kid Play Station: A play area for the little ones. A kitchen set with wooden toys, an art easel for painting, drawing with chalk, whiteboard writing and other activities. More below.
- Acrobatic Station: (Not Pictured) Hanging in the door of our school room is a Gorilla Gym (the best Christmas present we’ve ever gotten for our kids). This indoor playground is essentially a super strong pull-up bar with five attachments for play and exercise. The pull up bar is strong enough for adults to use, but a swing, a climbing rope, rings, a trapeze and a ladder can be added for the children to play. This is a great station for them to get their energy out or swing while listening to a lesson or a language CD.
- Book Station: (not pictured)- A simple bookcase of books that the children can access any time.
More detail on the various stations….
The Little Kid Learning Stations
Many of our little kid activities are stored in the bins on the other side of the classroom and not pictured, but some of their favorite activities are:
- Sorting Beads: I have a few dozen wooden beads that I’ve painted in various colors. The little ones can sort these into little wooden bowls that are painted the same color.
- Threading Beads: I use more of these painted wooden beads in a station where little ones can thread beads. They use shoelaces to thread the beads in various patterns.
- Sandpaper Letters: They have lowercase letters and uppercase letters on cards made out of sandpaper. This gives them a tactile experience of learning the letters and they really enjoy it. I know many moms who make these letters out of index cards and sandpaper, but this is one activity I chose to buy to save time getting ready for school.
- Lacing Cards: Another favorite activity for little ones… you could absolutely make these out of cardboard and shoelaces, but our kids got this set as a gift and it has been great for school.
- Counting Stations: For learning numbers, we have several activities: A magnetic learning maze (great for motor skills and counting), A count and sort, the abacus, and number rods.
- Blocks: They enjoy these blocks filled with colored sand to add another sensory element.
- Shapes and Fractions: We have cards and drawing modules for this, but also this Fraction Action Board, which we also use to teach the older ones fractions.
- Puzzle Stations: We have a box full of age-appropriate puzzles for little ones. They especially like this skeleton floor puzzle for learning the bones of the body.
- Arts and Crafts: When I’m feeling especially brave/crazy, we have painting, coloring, modeling clay and cutting stations for them to use. These are typically a special treat since they require more cleanup, but we try to do these a couple times a week.
- Wooden Animals: I got a big set of these non-toxic wooden Animals toys as a baby gift and they are one of the most played with activities for kids. They draw pictures of scenery to play with the animals on, make baby clothes to dress them up in, and match them to their zoo animal cards. These are also great to put in the diaper bag for church and other quiet times.
- Reading Station: Another favorite is a bin of board books and sensory books specifically for little ones. They like having their own books and “reading” them. They also have their personal books that I make for them each year with pictures and memories from the last year and they love looking back over these memories and asking about them.
- Music Station: Various wooden musical instruments for music time. We also have opera and classical music CDs for learning about music throughout history. Opera is the little kid favorite at our house.
We try to encourage the kids to only use one station at a time and clean it up before moving on to another. I’m not a Montessori perfectionist, and at times, several stations will end up out at one time, but in general, the idea of stations cuts down on mess. The rest of the little kid station includes a kitchen set with wooden food (another Christmas gift) and an art easel (also a Christmas gift)…
Big Kid Learning Stations
As I mentioned, we try to facilitate as much learning as possible outside, while traveling or while moving, but we do follow a hands-on curriculum for the older kids. I’ve set up learning stations for them as well, and they rotate so that we can teach them all easily.
The stations for the older kids include:
- School books: Kept in out school cabinet, these school books and workbooks are the core of the curriculum we use.
- Geography Station: The globe and big maps are used when teaching about geography and we also have puzzles, colorable maps, and matching games for this.
- Language Stations: This year, we are teaching the children Italian since it is part of their heritage. We have Little Pim Language Set for the littles and Rosetta Stone for the older ones. My husband teaches this subject since he speaks some Italian.
- Phonics and Reading Stations: I take an unusual approach to language and phonics. While teaching the basics of phonics and reading, I also use flash cards that I’ve made of the 100 most used words in the English language and flash cards of English From the Roots Up- Greek and Latin Roots (which I learned in school myself and which I credit partially with my high score on the SAT). The greek and latin roots help them understand language as they learn more complex words and make it easier to figure out what longer words mean.
- Lego Boxes and Hundreds Boards: Basic lego blocks are great for teaching counting, fractions, stacking and other number related activities. We also will incorporate these into subjects like history (letting them build models of ancient buildings) or science.
- Horticulture Station: We haven’t planted our plants for the year yet, but we have indoor plants, herbs and greens that the children tend during school each day. We also do experiments with sprouting seeds and planting for the garden to help them learn about this.
- Art Stations: Natural paints, coloring, clays, glue and scissors that we use for various activities.
- Science Experiments: We have various hands on experiments and stations for learning chemistry, biology, physics, etc. and the materials for these are stored in the boxes as well. Some favorites are the anatomy models we use for teaching biology, and the physics experiments.
Homeschool Classroom Decoration
The decorations in our classroom are very simple. I have some homeschooling friends whose classrooms are awe-inspiring, but I didn’t have the time/energy to create everything from scratch and opted for some basics from the local teacher supply store.
We have a simple alphabet poster around the top of the room and various learning posters that I change out throughout the year.
Once we begin school, most decorations are artwork or school work the kids have completed and it changes constantly.
Real Life Learning:
As important as structured learning is, my favorite thing to teach (and probably their favorite thing to learn) is what I call “Real Life Learning,” or lessons that help provide real life skills.
This may be anything from coming to the store and farmers market with me and helping determine which foods are the best deal (per ounce), making tinctures or salves with me, going on a nature hike and learning about wildcrafting or some form of fitness.
I try to involve my kids in activities like cooking dinner, doing laundry, sewing on buttons, and even balancing the checkbook (for the older ones) as these are practical skills that they will absolutely need one day, no matter what career or further education they choose.
In fact, most of the recipes on this blog are ones that my children helped me with in some way.
Important Note
I’m sharing our school room for informational purposes. I’m not an expert by any means and am learning as I go. Also, lest anyone think that our home and school room always looks this neat, the school room is organized right now because we haven’t begun our year school yet. 🙂
While we aim to keep things this clean and organized, it doesn’t always happen during school. I also attempt to be patient every single day during school and that doesn’t usually happen either. 🙂
The system, stations and notes above are optimal for our school system, but by no means do all aspects of this happen perfectly every day. Like parenthood, homeschooling is a moving target that seems to be constantly adapting and changing. There is no one-size-fits-all approach. Keep experimenting until you find the best homeschool schedule and set-up for you!
I hope that some of my tips will be helpful to you, and I’d love to hear some of your top tips for homeschooling or teaching your children as well.
Do you homeschool? What does your homeschool classroom look like? Have you found any tips, tricks, or hacks that make the learning process easier?
I echo what others have said, thank you for this post! It has gotten me brainstorming for t
Your organization is mind blowing!! What great space/room!! Ours looked a liiiitle bit ….well…*cough,cough*… different. It was my husband who wanted to home birth and HS. I agreed to home birth BUT HOME SCHOOL? He was practicing law, it was very demanding, he would be not much help… It scared me, because I was worried about starting such a huge commitment and was afraid I would not see it through.( a bad habit I had ) I prayed for 3 months, I told God ” If You want me to do this You have to give me the conviction” At the end of three months WILD HORSES (or my MIL who was dead set against it, “no socialization!!”) COULDN’T DRAG ME AWAY FROM DOING IT! Our’s was not a REACTION to public school it was based in a belief, this is what WE are supposed to do. Obedience. When we started HS’ing , (30 yrs ago) We used KONOS ( unit study) & Alpha-phonics because the closeness in ages KONOS lent itself to cross teaching. The first 3 boys, (of 6 boys) were really neck and neck on the learning curve.( No 3 ended up in Community college at 15, I have no delusions that it had anything to do with my prowess as a teacher, the 2nd & 3rd guys were motivated) No 4 didn’t take to reading till he was 10. When he did, it was “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea” Go figure. HS’ing was different every year. I encouraged them as they grew to take more control of what they would study past the basics. By the time they were 12,11,9,7….. they getting up at 6-7 am doing their work that I had laid out for them, by 10-10:30 they were out the door with a lunch THEY HAD PACKED!, to the creek where they would set up civilizations along the creek from different era’s, and play “stick men”. They had researched in our old (1970) Britannica Encyclopaedia about different civilizations . Not my idea. I never had to teach history, THEY TAUGHT ME!
No 6 son was 8 years after no 5 ( @43). I had massive stroke when he was 6. Teaching kick-boxing one day nearly dead the next. For that next year I was learning walk and talk while he was learning to read. Think about that for a twist. His older bros and dad took over. We made the adjustments on the fly…hey life happens!!
When 3 of my sons went to Iraq in the beginning of the war, oldest went 2xs, it was an amazing comfort that I had missed nothing of their growing up, 24/7 for first 17-18 yrs. No regrets. At one time or another they have individually thanked me for HS’ing them. (PHEW!! ) They are so very close, worked all the bugs out early I guess. 🙂 Oh ..and my MIL after seeing how “they turned out” said we choose right. I was a great fit for us, not everyone can do it, different circumstances dictate for sure. If you’re feeling the pull, and your situation is such you are able, you can make it fit YOUR FAMILY. There is NO set formula, every family different. Stay flexible and loose, STAY HUMBLE, ( nothing worse than parents that look down on other hs’ing OR even worse maybe, NON HS’ing families….) Cultivate a relationship with God and teach your kids to do the same. They/you will need it in the days ahead.
Dear Katie,
Your work is impressive but I just can’t comprehend how do YOU get it all done. Do your kids cooperate all the time or do you go with the flow or run a very strict schedule for yourself and everone else?
It would be helpful to find out how you strech out your human side because with a busy household and the wellness empire you must have a secret method. Hats off to you -sunhats 🙂 !
We do follow a pretty strict schedule, but every day is not perfect by any means. This is what the room looks like on a good day, and my routine is optimal but all things on my list don’t happen every day. Short answer, I guess, would be that I’m a work in progress and I don’t get as much sleep as I should…
Now that makes more sense. I know you work very hard and I hope you can find ways to get more sleep ( don’t forget to share when and how you do).Parenthood is actually the definition of work in progress. Thank you for your prompt reply. Keep up the good work!
As a mom who is just beginning to learn about homeschooling what would you recommend i should read. There are tons of “how to’s” out there and it’s just to overwhelming. I’d be more confident to buy a book if it’s wellnessmama approved! I do hope you’ll post more blogs about homeschooling. It sure is a big guide for a newbie like me. As always, thank you very very much for sharing your knowledge katie!
I just started to get into Montessori homeschooling with my 3 and 1 year old boys. I found this source especially helpful:
http://www.montessoriathomebook.com There are tons of websites with great ideas and projects out there, but he helps you get the big picture plus supplies tons of links. (I’m not an affiliate, I just appreciate how he brought light into the dark for me.)
Wellnessmama, thanks for sharing and inspiring so many people!
Hi Katie,
Would you share how you came to the decision to homeschool? For example, what are the pro/cons to homeschool vs. traditional school? Do you plan to homeschool all the way until college age? As the children get older how do you see your homeschool curriculum evolving? Will they be in clubs or sports with other kids? When you say “we” do you mean that your husband is also a teacher (of subjects in addition to Italian) or do you have help from other family/friends/outside tutors?
I’ve always been curious about homeschooling. No kids yet but thinking about it……Plus I love my job and can’t imagine staying home fulltime.
What’s your opinion of traditional school augmented by home learning? Are there any natural mama bloggers you can recommend that chose traditional school with tips on how to meet the challenge of keeping kids healthy, free of chemical/toxic exposure and maintaining real food nutrition?
PS – Katie, your homeschool room is so stinkin’ cute. Very impressive indeed.
Wow, a lot of questions.. I’ll try to answer them all. There are not a lot of good options for schools where we live (basically none actually). Even the private school didn’t have a curriculum that we liked and Montessori for five kids was cost prohibitive. We will most likely homeschool through grade school and re-evaluate when we get to high school age. Most likely, we will do a duel enrollment or co-op program where they have other teachers as well. They are in sports and clubs, as well as music lessons and jujutsu. My husband helps teach and grandparents also pitch in sometimes for certain subjects.
As far as traditional school augmented by home learning- I think all parents are teachers if they homeschool or not and we all have an obligation to teach our children, even if we send them to school.
You answered all of my questions and quickly – Thanks.
“…all parents are teachers” great point
I always felt you were a kindred spirit from the first time I heard you speak. We have 10 kids which we homeschool and I am passionate about providing them with a healthy lifestyle. When I saw this post I was inspired and blessed by what you shared. Thank you for all your time and effort to help others.
Kolbe! How the heck did you find it? I almost went there as a kid. Before it was an online school and alongside Trinity prep. Opted for St. A’s. I love the sacred Hearts! I knew I liked you for a reason. 😉 Thanks for sharing. It is awesome.
Hi katie,
Oh my gosh! I have asked you on one of your blog on homeschooling but i got no reply. Finally, i think my prayers has been answered 🙂 i thank you so much for this wonderful post. I have a 2yr old son and been thingking about homeschooling him. I have no idea how and where to start. This post is a wonderful help to start with. I even joined a homeschool group here in our area so i can get more support and ideas. As always, thank you so much. Please keep on posting stuff about homeschooling. Maybe some DIY activities we can create at home as well. Many many thanks!
Marj
I really appreciate your post! I have been following you for quite some time and had no idea you homeschooled. I just started homeschooling my 3 kids this year so I appreciate seeing how others are doing it and how they juggle everything. Thanks again for sharing this part of your life.
Stephanie
Great post! I have two young kiddos (3 and 1) and wanted to get started to a little pre-preschool education at home with my oldest. How old are your kids? Thanks for the info!