They Call Me Blessed

Our Relaxed Classical Homeschool

Meet Alison, a Canadian homeschooling mama of three, who uses a relaxed classical homeschool approach!

Our Relaxed Classical Homeschool: approach, routine & curriculumTell us about you and your family.

I live with my family in southern Ontario, Canada. I married my best friend 14 years ago, and together we have three beautiful daughters ages 2, 5, & 8.

How long have you been homeschooling?

I’ve been homeschooling my children from the beginning, from birth really! Most children around here start school in Junior Kindergarten, so we’ve been homeschooling 5 years.

Tell us about your relaxed classical approach.

I view homeschooling primarily as a means of discipleship. My homeschooling approach tends towards a relaxed classical style. Above all, I want my children to be steeped in that which is true, honorable, pure, lovely, commendable, excellent, and praiseworthy (Phil 4:8). We don’t use grade levels, and progress at our own rate, not necessarily in step with our public school peers.

Year-round homeschooling or traditional calendar homeschooling?

We definitely embrace year round homeschooling! I love that we can do our own thing and aren’t tied to any fixed schedule. It’s what allows us to capitalize on the “relaxed” aspect of our “relaxed classical” homeschool.

Tell us about your relaxed classical homeschool routine.

We start most of our days with morning chores, followed by breakfast with Bible reading. Our usual routine looks a bit like this:

Morning Time:

We’ve done a Morning Time from the beginning of our homeschool. During this time we sing and dance with the toddler, read aloud, do our daily devotional reading and hymn singing. We pray together and then move to the table for Bible study, art or music appreciation and memory work.

Table Time:

After Morning Time, my girls take turns playing with the toddler and working with mom at the table. Neither of my learners are very independent at this point, so we work side by side. We do our skill work at this time (spelling, writing, math, grammar). We usually spend about 2 hours max. each morning between Morning Time and bookwork.

Free Time until lunch, then more read aloud time, and finally quiet time for 1-2 hours.

Afternoons:

After quiet time we do our content subjects (science & history), a hands on project, or art for about an hour.

I’m not a big scheduler or planner, and I don’t schedule different subject for particular days of the week, I just try to keep moving consistently through our materials. I call my homeschool planning system “do the next thing”. We do alternate blocks of music appreciation and art appreciation in our Morning Time, but pretty much everything else is covered throughout the year.

Complete the sentence: Our homeschooling happens mostly at…

The dinning room table. And the couch.

What have you picked for your curriculum next year?

All the time that I don’t spend mapping out the specific details of our homeschool in a day in a planner or creating daily lesson plans, I do spend in choosing our resources and mapping out the big picture! I’m pretty set in my curriculum choices and have been pleased overall with how they are working out for us. These are our resources for next year:

Language Arts:

Math:

Science:

History:

Foreign Language:

Art & Music Appreciation:

Bible:

List 3 books about homeschooling that have really impacted you.

Your family is going on an unplanned trip, not much time to pack, and you must homeschool the kids while traveling. You can only take 5 of your homeschooling resources/books with you. What would you take?

This would have to be a pretty long trip if I were going to consider homeschooling while traveling! I can hardly fathom wanting or needing to take our homeschooling on the road, but if I did I would bring:

If you had the chance to start homeschooling all over again today with the knowledge and experience you have now, what would you do differently?

Not a whole lot actually. I mean, we have had a few curriculum choices that have not panned out very well for us, but when that happens, I just chalk it up to experience and chose differently next time. I do think however, that if I had had the knowledge and experience that I have now back then, I would have worried a bit less. Overall though, I have few regrets over the choices that we made. How I’ll feel in 10 or 15 years from now? We shall see!

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