Slow. Simple. Less. It is the heart of what I love about how we learn together, in our family, and it has been the best gift to my mother-teacher heart. It is how we do more than survive homeschooling, it is how we thrive, grow, and love to start all over every day.
I'm writing out these simple steps that have transformed our home and our education for the better hoping it might be a gift to another mommy looking for the simple, like I was. I would love to hear more about the ways you are simplifying and multiplying a love for learning, too.
I'm writing out these simple steps that have transformed our home and our education for the better hoping it might be a gift to another mommy looking for the simple, like I was. I would love to hear more about the ways you are simplifying and multiplying a love for learning, too.
Define family goals.
Make a list of the most important things.
Ask yourself these questions.
What’s most important to you when you think of education?
What do you value most in life and in learning?
What things do you most want to do as a teacher and as a student?
What do you want your daily rhythm to look like?
What are your goals for educating your child as a whole?
What do you want your daily rhythm to look like?
What are your goals for educating your child as a whole?
Simplifying education begins with these priorities. Your priorities. Your answers. It is day to day, and it's the finish line. It is being inspired by what is around you as it feeds your life and fuels your future.
It is vision casting and moment embracing.
It is vision casting and moment embracing.
Does it add to or take away from your family purpose?
Everything we do to educate must fall together. Every new thing we begin, I have to reevaluate if it is adding to our family purpose and direction or if it is pulling us away from it.
I need to constantly remember that it is not giving up to stop what is not working, it is empowering my family to learn more.
Everything we do to educate must fall together. Every new thing we begin, I have to reevaluate if it is adding to our family purpose and direction or if it is pulling us away from it.
I need to constantly remember that it is not giving up to stop what is not working, it is empowering my family to learn more.
Cut down on commitment.
Look at everything extra. Start thinking over how simplifying what you do, and how many commitments you have, can add to the fullness of your true learning.
Ask yourself these questions.
Ask yourself these questions.
Which of these really gives us true value?
Which of these bring value to my family unit?
Or add to the individual's needs?
Or add to the individual's needs?
Which ones do I find myself dreading or avoiding?
Which of these point to my beliefs?
Which of these are in line with the most important things I listed above?
Spending time really evaluating is the key to making sure your weeks feel like a gift and not like a to-do list. Life is far more valuable than a list of things to check off.
Asking myself these simple questions are how I know what to keep doing and what to keep using, and I have to keep asking myself these things over and over and over again. Because our rhythm and our lives are always changing and moving and growing.
Spending time really evaluating is the key to making sure your weeks feel like a gift and not like a to-do list. Life is far more valuable than a list of things to check off.
Evaluate your daily rhythm.
Asking myself these simple questions are how I know what to keep doing and what to keep using, and I have to keep asking myself these things over and over and over again. Because our rhythm and our lives are always changing and moving and growing.
How do I spend my day?
What things do I do, from the time I wake up to the time I go to sleep?
What do we use for our morning times, school times, adventuring times, rest times, meal times, chore times, and bedtime routines?
Find a gentle routine that works for your family.
It can be a simple, changeable, detour willing plan. And full of all things important to your family at this time. Once you know how you want to move through the day, it will be easier to eliminate what you do not want getting in the way of that.
Less is More
Purge. Purge. Purge.
Let go. Pass it on. Gift it to a family that can use it right now. Make room for what actually brings you joy and adds to both your teaching style and your family vision. Move things out of your space that take up space for things that will help you all learn more fully.
Decompress.
Purge. Purge. Purge.
Let go. Pass it on. Gift it to a family that can use it right now. Make room for what actually brings you joy and adds to both your teaching style and your family vision. Move things out of your space that take up space for things that will help you all learn more fully.
Decompress.
Every life is filled with stress, especially this time in our lives. No matter how much you simplify your life, you’ll still have stress. So when we go through stress, we need to find ways to decompress. Especially as we purge and let go.
Go outside. Take a walk. Collect treasures along your path. Read a good book. Have a good cup of tea with your people. Paint in your nature journal. Smell the flowers.
Go outside. Take a walk. Collect treasures along your path. Read a good book. Have a good cup of tea with your people. Paint in your nature journal. Smell the flowers.
Define Your Spaces
You will need spaces to learn, spaces to store, and spaces to create.
When you begin homeschooling, it will be incredibly helpful if you have some ideas in mind of spaces you can learn and spaces you can store items you will need. We use several areas of our home for learning, some for learning all together, some of independent work. We have carts for different supplies we use daily and weekly and we have storage in a closet for items used less frequently. You can see a peek inside our largest homeschooling space here in this blog post. And it is okay if these spaces keep changing as your family does, too. And they might even change daily.
A Place for Everything
Having a place for each item sounds so incredibly daunting. It is hard to create spaces and decide what should reside in those spaces. Thankfully, we have a large closet and several spaces around our home we could devote to learning spaces, each with their own purpose. But even if we did not, it would be important for us to have some clear space to have daily supplies and a place for supplies used less frequently. Even if it were as simple as a bin for one and a basket for another.
Living with a minimalist mindset means buying less, wanting less. It is being creative with what God has already blessed you with. You can take an inventory of the items you have already for learning and print it to be placed in a notebook with sections for school subjects and exploration. This can save unneeded purchases and more things to store away that you do not need.
Time Freedom, Choosing Our Minutes
The most valuable gift of having less, and doing less, is time. You actually can gift yourself more hours in the day. And more energy.
We aim for quality, not quantity. Less really is more.
The most valuable gift of having less, and doing less, is time. You actually can gift yourself more hours in the day. And more energy.
We aim for quality, not quantity. Less really is more.
Like the smallest little eggs waiting to hatch, we try live life more deliberately slow. It's so hard to do every task slowly, with ease, paying full attention to what I am doing, but it is so worth the effort.
Single-task.
Imagine giving yourself permission to allow yourself to one thing at a time. Just one, And give it all of your intention before moving on to the next. This can be life changing, peace giving. Multi-tasking is more complicated, more stressful, and generally less productive.
Imagine giving yourself permission to allow yourself to one thing at a time. Just one, And give it all of your intention before moving on to the next. This can be life changing, peace giving. Multi-tasking is more complicated, more stressful, and generally less productive.
Fill your days with simple pleasures.
A cup of tea. A walk on the beach. A cuddle on the couch. We need simple, lovely things to find a joyful, complete life.
A cup of tea. A walk on the beach. A cuddle on the couch. We need simple, lovely things to find a joyful, complete life.
Be present.
Living here and now, in the moment, keeps us aware of life, of what is going on around us and inside us. It keeps us filled with thankful hearts and makes everything else so much more clear and defined. I'm forever striving to be present in the moment, and for each person in this home who needs a share of my time, attention and presence.
Living here and now, in the moment, keeps us aware of life, of what is going on around us and inside us. It keeps us filled with thankful hearts and makes everything else so much more clear and defined. I'm forever striving to be present in the moment, and for each person in this home who needs a share of my time, attention and presence.
School slowly becomes as a lifestyle not a textbook.
When you start living for learning, every part of your journey is an opportunity for education. It is an adventure life. A knowledgeable life. One that is found in simple ingredients and not heavy textbooks. Book are amazing tools and I have a few baskets filled with ones that bring stories, times, and places to life for us, living books. But we do not keep all the books. We do have a couple of bookcases, but we often trade out books with friends, and use the local library for many of the books to help us study and explore what we are learning about.
Carefully choosing curriculum that gives you more flexibility and freedom, and less stuff to find spaces for is so freeing. You can also find curriculum that can be used as a family unit or for multiple students. This reduces not only what you store, but your time, which is valuable and worth preserving.
But in the end, the world is your classroom. Learning is found on your nature walk, while baking a cake together, while learning to care to that pig you won at the fair in the pig scramble (true story). When you open yourself up to a learning lifestyle, you are never without everything you need to educate.
Curriculum we love that embraces these guidelines are
The Peaceful Press
Five in a Row
The Good and the Beautiful
Beautiful Feet Books
The Homegrown Preschooler
Simple homeschool supplies are often the best.
When you start living for learning, every part of your journey is an opportunity for education. It is an adventure life. A knowledgeable life. One that is found in simple ingredients and not heavy textbooks. Book are amazing tools and I have a few baskets filled with ones that bring stories, times, and places to life for us, living books. But we do not keep all the books. We do have a couple of bookcases, but we often trade out books with friends, and use the local library for many of the books to help us study and explore what we are learning about.
Carefully choosing curriculum that gives you more flexibility and freedom, and less stuff to find spaces for is so freeing. You can also find curriculum that can be used as a family unit or for multiple students. This reduces not only what you store, but your time, which is valuable and worth preserving.
But in the end, the world is your classroom. Learning is found on your nature walk, while baking a cake together, while learning to care to that pig you won at the fair in the pig scramble (true story). When you open yourself up to a learning lifestyle, you are never without everything you need to educate.
Curriculum we love that embraces these guidelines are
The Peaceful Press
Five in a Row
The Good and the Beautiful
Beautiful Feet Books
The Homegrown Preschooler
Simple homeschool supplies are often the best.
Some of our favorite supplies are
a good pencil case for traveling
ticonderoga pencils
scholar colored pencils
ticonderoga pencils
scholar colored pencils
watercolors
chalkboards (big, little, and travel ones)
sketch books
composition notebooks
clipboards
But no matter how you learn, where you study, and what you use to complete it,