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A Day in the Life of Our Homeschool

What does a TYPICAL homeschool day look like in our home? 

I want to give you a picture - a TRUE picture - of how an average day plays out. 

Some background:   

My children are 14 (Classical Conversations Challenge I) and 11 (Classical Conversations Foundations and Essentials).  I am a work at home mom (the blog, SQUILT, and social media consulting) , so while I'm not juggling a larger number of children, I am juggling work responsibilities throughout my entire school day. 

I try to strike a balance between independent activities, hands-on activities, and activities where we are together (read alouds, etc...).  

It's never perfect, but I find that having a PLAN in place is essential and being FLEXIBLE is key. I rely on and try to give a lot of grace, too. 

A Day in the Life of our Homeschool

*This day in the life  is the day AFTER our community day.  You will notice some scheduling time for my oldest and some more independent activities for my youngest.  Each day will look slightly different during the rest of the week.


Consistent Morning Time

Morning Time happens each day. I created a simple morning basket - and I cannot tell you how much I love starting every day this way! 

Our basket includes a devotional, Foundations memory work review, any memory work my Challenge I daughter has, an art book, and SQUILT.  We also watch CNN Student News during our morning time. 

Ideally we try to be at the kitchen table between 8-8:30 a.m., but I have to be flexible with this.

The important thing is that morning time HAPPENS each day.

There have been some days where morning time is one of the ONLY thing that has happened (you know THOSE kinds of days). 


Independence in Challenge I

Weekly Planning for Challenge I - Classical Conversations

After morning time my daughter gets her "command center" (her fancy name for her binder which includes her copy of the guide and folders for all of her work) and completes her planning sheet for the week. 

After some struggles through scheduling in Challenge A and B, my daughter is almost fully independent in Challenge I.   (You might be interested in my posts about Challenge A and B... they were written after completing those years and hopefully can help you if you are in the trenches.)

Those struggles were BY DESIGN, and in hindsight I can see how God blessed us with time management failures and struggles.  

I am AMAZED at how well and easily my 14 year old can plan and execute an entire week of school work. 

Here you can see her completed planning sheet, research she is doing for a paper on the history of the piano, and cookies!  She has a sweet friend in class who lost his grandfather last week and she wanted to make his family dinner and cookies. 

I checked in on her several times during the day, listening to a poem she was memorizing, assisting with a math problem she was having, and just lending general support. 

I  love that she had many things to accomplish in a day and she got up and made a plan for the day, and accomplished everything! 

Independence in Challenge I

Focus on Different Subjects on Different Days

For my son, certain things happen every day... those are morning time, math, and piano practice. 

On this day in the life, we focus on history and geography.   

I find that by having a good memory work review each day, and then expanding just a bit upon certain areas of the memory work on subsequent days, we get a good balance for the week. 

---->> If I had more littles running around the house I would be very secure knowing that on certain days THE MEMORY WORK IS ENOUGH!  <<----

We recently added a large white board to our school area, and it's helpful if I write out what the schedule/accomplishments are for the day.  

Sample Daily Schedule for our Homeschool Day
  • Morning time consisted of normal things in our morning basket, and we also added in a slideshow on YouTube of Giotto's art.  
  • Grant takes the Veritas Self Paced History course online.  I LOVE this because it is 100% independent.  He did two lessons, and then the assigned reading for the day.  He also printed the Cuneiform alphabet from the Veritas course and wrote secret Cuneiform messages.  Grant also decided a Cuneiform presentation would be great for our next community day, so we began brainstorming about that.
  • Saxon Math 6/5 Lesson 100 was completed.
  • Map tracing was completed (using our Geography Notebook)
  • We watched a Drive Thru History episode for fun with our Right Now Media subscription (through CC)
  • 4:45 were piano lessons  (with a quick stop to pick up mom's new glasses beforehand!)
Typical Day in Foundations/Essentials

This day (which is a Wednesday) is not a day where we do Essentials (IEW writing and diagramming sentences/copying grammar charts).

Essentials days are Thursday and Friday in our house. 


I pray this information has been helpful to you. 

Talk to me about your homeschool day. Do you follow a structured plan?  Do you allow more time for interests to lead the way?   Leave me a comment below and let me know. 

We're all different and each homeschool has a unique flavor and strengths. That is one of the things I love most about homeschooling! 

A Day in the Life of Our Homeschool

Collage Friday

Join me on alternating Fridays for a wrap up of the week - or just to share pertinent thoughts that have been rambling in your head during the past week.

Be sure to include your photo collages!

Then, visit other bloggers that have linked and leave them a supportive comment.  I love the Collage Friday community!

Add your link using the widget below. Additionally, if you'd like to join further, use the hashtag #collagefriday on Instagram, Facebook, or Twitter. 

A Good State of "Busy"

I am not a big fan of "busy". 

At this time of year, though, I think a certain amount of busy is unavoidable, and actually welcomed. 

We've had such a great couple of weeks - from school events to volunteer events, birthdays and home renovations. I don't think I've sat down much, but we have accomplished so much and have made a lot of good memories. 

We are doing simple schooling in December to allow ourselves time and space for other things.

Despite having a tooth pulled last week (yuck) and general craziness because of construction in our home, as I look at this update I see we've really had good times. 


Operation Christmas Child

Once again this year we traveled to the Operation Christmas Child processing center just north of Atlanta. 

This is becoming a tradition with the students in our Challenge community, and I love that. 

There is something very special about serving with teens, and this is one of my favorite events of the year. 

Operation Christmas Child Processing Center in Atlanta - 2015

Wrapping Up School Work

This week is officially the END for us. (well - at least until we begin again in 2016)

It was a lot of fun to attend a production of The Best Christmas Pageant Ever at a local theater. This books is a WONDERFUL read aloud if you're looking for a fun Christmas book! 

Grant is continuing to review his memory work each day.  I love that the memory work is ENOUGH during times like this.  We add in a Saxon math lesson and quiet reading and I feel like his days are complete. 

Anna took her midterm blue book exams for Challenge I on Tuesday. There was Latin translation, writing two papers on the spot in science and literature, reciting the outline of the Constitution, and also a Shakespeare presentation that she did about The Taming of the Shrew.  (She did a modern day retelling of one of the scenes and dressed up as a "thug" Kathryn.  I wish I would have gotten pictures, but you know how teenage girls are about having their pictures taken, right?!) 

In addition to her Challenge I work, she is still completing her online math and Latin classes for the semester, so she's not truly "finished" until the end of next week. 

I LOVE that Anna is learning to budget her own time and sometimes succeeding and sometimes failing.  We have a safe place to fail right now, and it is a perfect growth opportunity. 

GO HOMESCHOOL! 

Homeschool Fun and "School" in December

Celebrating a Birthday

Grant's 11th birthday is this weekend. He wanted to celebrate with a few good buddies during the week.

We took the entire day off on Tuesday. We went bowling, ate lunch at the pizza buffet, then came home for football in the yard and Minecraft. It was the best day I have had in a long time!

Best of all, Grant asked me if we could make a cake together the night before. We used a simple, delicious cookie cake recipe and it turned out so well! 

When your almost 11 year old asks you to spend an evening with him baking a birthday cake, you say yes automatically.  I realize we may not have this chance many more times, and I savored every minute of the cake baking. 

Grant's 11th Birthday Collage

Basement Update

Maybe in next week's Collage Friday I will be able to say that the basement is 100% finished and passed the final inspections. 

Right now we are just waiting for flooring and the final fixtures to go in the bathroom. 

I'm SO EXCITED about the way this is all coming together. It has been a challenging 7 weeks, but we are very pleased with the efficiency and speediness of the project. We have a great contractor! 

It's become apparent to us in the past year that we needed this space to be finished. Having daddy at home 100% of the time now is a blessing, but he needs SPACE, and we need more room as the kids are getting bigger. Finishing this space was easier (and cheaper!) than moving, so we decided to go for it. 

I decided on a Sherwin Williams' Light French Gray for the walls - with an accent wall in Sea Serpent for my husband's office.  

The floors are a very dark laminate vinyl tile (LVT - a hot product right now I understand). 

The new school room is open and airy, with lots of recessed lighting. It has a large closet (for LEGO® Education things) and plenty of room for the IKEA Billy bookshelves that will hold our books. 

I don't have any pictures of the family room yet - but it's a good size and will hopefully be a comfy place for the kids to lounge with their friends or for us to have family movie nights. 

The door leading to the basement has been the joke of the whole project! From the very start I said I wanted a glass door painted black.  I don't know why, but it's been my "one thing". When that door was painted and installed this week it made me very happy! 

I need your help, though -- don't you think the door to the left of the glass door (that's actually my pantry) should be painted black, too?   Help me settle a debate, please!   {wink}

Nearly completed basement project

That's it for our Collage Friday today!  

How has your week been?  Are you still schooling or are you taking some time off -- or a combination of both?  

 

Collage Friday

*Note: Collage Friday will return on January 8th.  Please enjoy your holidays and link up here again in 2016! I will leave this linky open until then if you have a post you'd like to enter. 

Join me each Friday for a wrap up of the week - or just to share pertinent thoughts that have been rambling in your head during the past week.

Be sure to include your photo collages!

Then, visit other bloggers that have linked and leave them a supportive comment.  I love the Collage Friday community!

Add your link using the widget below. Additionally, if you'd like to join further, use the hashtag #collagefriday on Instagram, Facebook, or Twitter.