Our Kindergarten Homeschool Routine and Curriculum

We’re a month into our first year of homeschooling now, and after making a few shifts and really finding our groove, I’m thrilled with how our weekly and daily routines are falling into place.

After spending months researching different curriculum options back in the spring (I gave myself a deadline to purchase everything by June 1st so I wouldn’t be overthinking it all summer), I’m pretty happy overall with what we landed on. I’ve been able to quickly figure out where we’re lacking, how we can supplement, and how to structure our weeks to be most efficient and not bog our days down with schoolwork – because isn’t that the whole point?!

Sharing below about each of our picks, what I like (or don’t) about it, and how we’re fitting it all in each week.

Kindergarten Curriculum Choices | Core Subjects

The Good and The Beautiful Language Arts | Steele completed TGATB Kinder Prep last year, so we were somewhat familiar with this one. Their Level K Language Arts is open-and-go with zero prep or busy work and I can see why TGATB is a popular choice, but I do agree with critiques about their language arts curriculum being “wide, not deep” — the lessons often feel disconnected and surface-level. I’m not sure this is a long-term fit, but she enjoys it, so we’re sticking with it for now and filling in the gaps with a great reading comprehension workbook and THIS for spelling/vocabulary.

Handwriting Without Tears | We’re loving the Level K Handwriting program and its foundations for cursive later on, as well as Keys for Me, their beginner computer skills course. Super impressed with both! I ended up also getting their Building Writers workbook, which has been a great supplement.

Singapore Math | A huge YES for us! This program is unique in so many ways and has tons of research to support its methods. Steele has a strong grasp on lots of math concepts (seriously, get your toddlers watching Numberblocks and prepare to be amazed) and I was hopeful this curriculum would keep her challenged. It has blown me away! We’re finishing up KA/KB (lots of valuable lessons and foundational things I wanted to make sure she’s confident with) and we’re excited to settle in with the Grade 1 set this fall. This one’s a definite win and we haven’t looked back!

Answers Bible Lessons | This ended up not being a good fit for us, unfortunately. It’s very dense for a 5-year-old. I decided to wait before trying to find a replacement for this one, as our devotionals and seasonal studies incorporate lots of Bible time.

Supplemental Curriculum

The Ology | More here! Its Truths and discussion questions are helping us build solid faith foundations before we dive into another Bible curriculum.

Indescribable: Devotions About God + Science | More here! We’re enjoying these — quick, interesting, thought-provoking — and will continue on with the others in the series, How Great is Our God/The Wonder of Creation.

The Good and The Beautiful Science | TGATB has five overarching science units for PK-2, all of which can be taught in any order and adapted for multiple ages, so the boys can participate too. The lessons are quick, minimal prep if any, engaging, age-appropriate and creative. We love it!

Beginning Geography | An intro to maps, landforms, bodies of water, continents and oceans – more here. She’s learned so much from this already! A worthy addition.

Brighter Day Press Seasonal + Holiday Studies | We got the Labor Day, Autumn, Thanksgiving, Advent, and Spring studies and have enjoyed them even more than I expected! They’ve been a great way to round out each week with fun, enriching activities and they’re easy to do with multiple children/ages.

Exploring Nature | More here. Several are climate/location dependent, but we’ll get at least a dozen good, simple activities out of this book.

Deep Space Sparkle Art Projects | I happened upon this website when searching for kindergarten art projects and I’m so thankful. Lots of artist studies and projects organized by grade level, designed to teach art skills in an intentional way. We’ve had so much fun with these!

Our Weekly Homeschool Routine for Kinder

One theme I kept seeing as I was thinking about how to structure our days: we’re not trying to replicate public school at home. I wanted to intentionally leave room for play, rest, outings and activities throughout our weeks. It took us a little bit to figure out how to fit all the pieces together, factoring in things like dance practice, the boys going to preschool two days a week and being home with us the other three, and spreading out our writing-heavy days, but we’ve found a great routine. Most days we are done with our work by lunchtime or we’ll save core subjects for the boys’ rest time.

There are a lot of physical homeschool planners out there, but I prefer digital so I can easily edit and move things around. I made this template on Google Docs that I copy from week to week and fill in details where needed. We print each week out and check off as we go, but I usually let her pick the order of our subjects each day and if something comes up and we need to adjust, it’s not a big deal. Here’s what our typical week looks like!

As for the boys – they are newly 4 and still two years away from officially starting kinder (early September birthday so we’ll wait til they’re 6). Two days of preschool a week is plenty for them right now, but they of course want to be included and both love to “do school” too, so we encourage them to join us for devotionals, seasonal studies, nature, art, music and science lessons as those aren’t as age-specific. They play outside or independently while we do other subjects, or if they want to be at the table with us, these preschool workbooks keep them pretty busy (thank you Larson for the rec!). It’s not always calm or quiet but if we need a break, we pause and play! If we need to chill out, we sit on the couch and read. If we need to head to the park, we go.

I’m not aiming for a specific number of days for our school year – we started the last week of August and I want to be finished by mid-May, with plenty of breaks and hopefully some travels in there too! Most of our curriculum is intended to fit a typical school year but we’re just going at a pace that feels right, going on to the next level if we get there, slowing down if we need to, and seeing where we end up.

Future Curriculum Picks

Always keeping an open mind of course, but here’s what I’m interested in adding to our lineup for next year and beyond:

Singapore Math Sprints (speed drills for 1st grade/up)
BJU Press Writing + Grammar (2nd grade/up)
Bite Size Social Studies (1st grade)
Notgrass 50 States (2nd grade)
Handwriting Without Tears Cursive (2nd grade/up)
The Good and The Beautiful Science, History, Creative Writing, Music Appreciation (3rd grade/up)
World Watch News (3rd grade/up)
Not Consumed Bible Studies (all ages)

Lots on this list influenced by Francie Outlaw — I love her heart for homeschool and for teaching her children in general.

No curriculum is perfect, no single program will cover every single thing we’re wanting or needing – but that’s the beauty of getting to custom-tailor things. We can piece together a plan that works beautifully.

Homeschooling is teaching us both so much and is truly one of the best decisions our family has made. It’s given us SO much joy and peace. If you’re considering homeschool for kindergarten, I’m cheering you on!

Homeschool, Here We Come!

File this under: posts I never thought I’d be writing. But here we are! Finishing up our oldest’s pre-K year at a local church preschool, eager to start Kindergarten, at home, together. It feels surreal to even say!

I started considering homeschool for our daughter (keeping an open mind for our boys, more on that later) a few years ago. So many things about it sounded like a great fit for our family, our beliefs, and our values, but of course I had so many questions and hesitations along the way. When I first brought it up to Andrew, I honestly expected a little more pushback, but his support from the get-go was so encouraging and gave me the nudge to keep pursuing the idea more seriously. I got the confidence I needed to finally say “ok, this is what we’re doing” when I *very nervously* told my mom (who has spent 40 years teaching and working in public education) about our plans and she had nothing but support and encouragement for our decision.

Why homeschool?

The main drivers behind our decision were freedom, faith, and family. Which sounds so cliché, but really, all of our reasons for homeschooling boiled down to these three things. We want the freedom and flexibility it will allow our family to structure our days like we want to, to learn about the things we want to at the pace we want to, to get out and go places when we want to. We want the ability to incorporate our faith into our children’s education because our faith is at the core of who we are and everything we do as a family. And mostly, we want to preserve childhood for at least a little longer. We want to give our five year old time to be FIVE. To play with her brothers and friends, to spend hours outside, to not be woken up at the crack of dawn and hurried out the door or be beholden to a rigid schedule. I’m so incredibly excited and grateful for, if nothing else, one more year of slow mornings at home with my children. I don’t take for granted the privilege it is for our family to have this opportunity, and I’m going to try to steward this extra time we get to spend together well!

Our homeschool style + Priorities

Before I could even begin to narrow down curriculum choices, I had to articulate what our goals and priorities were for home education – essentially, what “style” or method would work best for us. There are several popular methods of homeschooling, and it looks like we’ll be blending aspects of a couple of them. I like the structure and predictability of a thorough open-and-go curriculum (Traditional), but we want more than just workbooks. It’s important to us to emphasize reading, art, nature, music and scripture (Charlotte Mason), and I’m excited that a lot of our curriculum has a common thread of foundational faith teachings. I want field trips, outings, cooking together, and camping and hunting with her daddy to all contribute to her overall education, too. There are learning opportunities everywhere!

Trusting my own discernment

Researching curriculum was incredibly intimidating for me. One of the main advantages to homeschooling is getting to tailor what we do to her strengths, abilities, personality, and interests, so I didn’t want to pick something that ended up feeling “wrong” for her, something that didn’t challenge her enough, something too rigid or not rigid enough. I set a goal to have our choices made by May, and started to familiarize myself with some of the more popular options several months prior, looking through scopes and sequences, reading reviews and sifting through comparison blogs. I knew at some point I just had to trust my own discernment, place my orders, and know that nothing is set in stone. If something ends up not working, we can always shift and try something else.

I shared more details about our specific curriculum choices HERE!

Tuning out the noise

The public school/private school/homeschool debate isn’t something I want to devote a lot of mental energy to. All three options are great for different families, in different seasons, for different reasons. I don’t want to fall into the comparison trap and do my best to put my blinders on, focus on MY children and MY home and our family’s situation, and not worry about the rest. I don’t follow many homeschool accounts (really, just one) because the overload of information and opinions can be way too much noise, but Francie Outlaw’s account has been one I’ve loved for years and I appreciate so many of her insights on parenting, family values, systems for the home, and homeschooling. Many of our curriculum choices were influenced by her, and I plan to use her Weekly Planner system to map out our lessons and keep us organized.

Keeping an open mind

As I mentioned, we’re going into this very open-minded and taking things one year at a time. I know I’m going to be learning right alongside Steele this coming year, figuring out what works best for us, adjusting as we go, and giving us both a lot of grace along the way. While I fully believe that a well-rounded education doesn’t require a classroom setting or following the standards set by our state, we’re also not opposed to public school or private school options for the future, and we have two more years before we need to make a decision for our boys. So we’ll see how this year goes and go from there. Here’s to our first year of homeschooling!