Five Things Saving Our Homeschool Right Now.
Am I doing this right?… I love the freedom of homeschooling! Park days during the school year are the best!… Are my kids getting what they need?… Why won’t they stop fighting?…I’m so excited to learn together! But some days (many days…every day?) don’t go as I planned…How can I stay on top of all that I need to do? …How do we establish the routines and practices that will help our homeschool to be successful?
As we head into our 9th year as a homeschool family, I have a few of those thoughts swirling around in my head, too. But I feel secure in some of the routines and habits we’ve developed, so I want to share with you today Five Things that are Saving our Homeschool:
Reading Aloud during Breakfast
The Family Cleaning Zone
- I choose an area of the house that needs some attention
- Make a list (could be a mental list, or a physical list) of everything that needs to be cleaned/sorted/decluttered/organized
- Spend 15 minutes per day cleaning it until it’s under control
- Set a timer and really stick to 15 minutes
- Repeat
(Side note: our Morning Time is not beautifully blissful from start to end. We have plenty of grumpy moments–from the kids and/or myself. We’re human. We annoy each other. We don’t always want to sit down together and learn things. There are interruptions from Littles, from bickering siblings, from the toilet overflowing. But we’re doing our best and overall I love how this time goes.)
Nature Group/Co-op
Unplugging in the Mornings
I have discovered that I need a large chunk of time to myself in the mornings before the busy-ness of homeschool life begins. I thrive on quiet time, time to think and plan and learn and fill up my tank. I have a carefully curated morning routine, filled with activitiies that bring me life. This routine has grown and changed over the years. Currently it looks like this: I study scripture (this year I’m studying the Old Testament), read a few pages of Walking with the Women of the Old Testament, read an uplifting book (currently: A Million Little Ways by Emily P. Freeman), I write in my journal, perhaps create a little art, write for 25-30 minutes (for the blog) and exercise.
It sounds jam-packed, and I really do manage to fit in a lot during the 60-90 minutes I’m up before the kids arise. Some mornings it’s hard to get started, but I’m always happier if the day begins this way; it brings my introverted heart such joy.
I found a couple of months ago that it was really easy for me to become distracted during the mornings. I’d hop on Instagram just to check in and end up spending 15 (or more) precious minutes there. I’d be so frustrated with myself because then I couldn’t get to all the life-giving parts of my routine. It created a mantra, “I did not get up early to be on social media.” and that helped, but what really changed my habit is using an app called App Block.
I set it up to block email and Instagram (other social media apps are not on my phone at all, ever–I’m looking at you, Facebook) until 11:30 every morning. That means I don’t “check in” there at all until my morning routine is complete, until the kids and I have read aloud and done school and the bulk of my list for around the house is complete each day. This has been life changing for me. I didn’t realize how much time “checking in” ate up throughout the day. And not just time, but mental space. It took me out of the moment and distracted me from spending time on what really matters.
I’m a definite morning person, so my most productive hours are before lunch. With this system in place, I don’t waste my most productive time on social media. I have App Block set up to block email and Instagram again from 1:00-5:00 in the afternoon. I most often accomplish work for my blog and shop as well as any other project I’m working on, during this time. Without the temptation to see what’s new online, I am able to get much more of the work I love done. I often rest or read during this time, and it’s much too easy for me to pick up my phone instead of a book, so I’m trying to eliminate that temptation all together.
I’m definitely a work in progress in this area. It’s sad to me to think how much time I’ve wasted scrolling, but I find inspiration online, too. I use it for my little business, so I’m trying to find a balance and right now App Block is working well for me.