• Skip to main content
  • Skip to after header navigation
  • Skip to site footer

Sallie Schaaf Borrink

  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Premium Content
    • Purchase Premium Access
    • Premium Member Log-in
  • Categories
        • Free Printables
        • Gifted & 2e
        • Gracious Christian Parenting
        • Homemaking
        • Homeschooling
        • Our Family Stories
        • Questioning the Narrative
        • Rebuilding America
        • Simple Living
        • Unit Studies & Learning Themes
        • Tags
  • My Printables Shop
    • The Lifetime Pass
    • Explore The Shop
    • Your Cart
    • Your Account Details
      • View Your Orders
      • Go To Your Downloads
      • My Account
    • Lost Password Help
    • Digital Products Terms of Use
  • Comments
  • Forum
    • Login
    • Sign Up
  • Search

Welcome & Miscellaneous

See the sidebar for all categories

Start Here

Subscribe

Donate

Tags

Sallie’s Rebuilding America – My News Analysis Website

My Recommendations

The Shop

Explore The Shop

The Lifetime Shopping Pass

Your Cart

Digital Products Terms of Use

Your Account

View Your Orders

Go To Your Downloads

Lost Password Help

Cozy & Simple Living

Simple Living

Homemaking

Our Cozy Family Life

The Prudent & Prepared Homemaker

Free Homemaking Printables

Holidays & Traditions

Comfort Food Recipes

Health

Home Education & Parenting

Home Education

Discipleship Homeschooling

Gracious Christian Parenting

Gifted/2e Parenting for Christians

Homeschooling a Creative Child

Homeschool Mom Encouragement

Homeschool Planning

Gifted/2e Homeschooling

Unit Studies & Themes

Unit Studies & Resources

Unit Studies

Unit Study Activities

Poetry

Christian Faith

Christian Faith

Prayer

Marriage

Bible Readings & Christian Devotionals

Morning Hope

Eventide Blessing

Streams in the Desert

You are here: Home / Homeschooling / Homeschool Planning / 3 Ways To Change Your Homeschool Approach




Archives

3 Ways To Change Your Homeschool Approach

Monday, July 21, 2014 (Updated: Saturday, November 15, 2025)
3 Comments

Post may contain affiliate links. Read my disclosure statement.

Did you have ideas about what homeschooling would be like before you started? Before your child was out of diapers? How about before you had a child? I did. We were married almost ten years before we were blessed with Caroline so I had plenty of time to ponder homeschooling before she was even born.

And the funny thing is that it doesn’t look anything like I imagined it would.



There’s lots of reasons for that. I’ve changed. She is very much her own individual person. Our life circumstances have changed. Our financial situation has changed. My professional life has changed. Our location has changed.

My homeschooling approach has been much more fluid and flexible than I would have guessed.

While some people latch on to a particular homeschooling approach and run with it for years, I’ve never found that to work. At all.

Even when I wanted it to.

The more I’ve gotten to know my child, the more it’s necessitated changes to how we do school. Here are three ways you might consider shaking up your homeschool routine if you feel like it is in need of being re-energized.

1. Embrace a Different Homeschool Philosophy

I know this might sound nigh unto heretical to those who hold strong views regarding which approach is the best, but it may be what your homeschool needs. There are families homeschooling successfully using a wide variety of methods. There is absolutely no one way to do this home education thing.

Ask yourself if you are more committed to your philosophy or to your child’s individual needs.

Maybe you really want to be a classical homeschooler because you wished you had that kind of education, but it isn’t the best for your child.

Or maybe you love the warm fuzzy Charlotte Mason blogs you read, but you’re an indoor person who can’t do nature study outside.

Maybe your family would thrive ina relaxed homeschooling approach, but it scares you to think of giving up that much control.

Maybe you need to embrace who your child really is and not what you wish she was. If you have never done it before, you may need to take some time and study your child and make adjustments.

And if you have been homeschooling for just a year, you will really want to allow yourself freedom to make changes based on everything you’ve learned and experienced this first time around.

Exploring a different homeschool philosophy and changing your approach might be a great way to re-energize your homeschool. Whatever you do, make sure it is a mom-friendly approach!

2. Change Your Homeschool Yearly Cycle

Unless you are in a state with very rigid laws, homeschooling allows so much freedom. There are so many ways to schedule your year and maybe a different yearly flow would re-energize your homeschool.

Some families go six weeks on and one week off.

Some families do school four days a week, but go all year.

Some families do school all year, but take off the time between Thanksgiving and New Years as well as the month of July.

Personally I’d like to try to do school from January through August and take off September through December.

Would changing your overall yearly approach help your family?

3. Change Your Homeschool Daily Schedule

I’m going to let you in on a little secret…

Did you know you don’t have to homeschool in the morning?

Shocking thought, isn’t it?

Let me ask you this… How many people did you know who refused to take an 8:00 a.m. or even a 9:10 a.m. class in college? Quite a few, I bet. Especially the 8:00 a.m. classes. I didn’t know ANYONE who willingly took one. But I can’t think of a single person who failed to function in the “real world” after college because they couldn’t get up and get to work on time.

Taking an 8:00 a.m. class did not equate to success in the real world. Neither does homeschooling in the morning mean your child will be better prepared for the real world.

I think it is amusing how quickly people extol the virtues of homeschooling flexibility when it comes to curriculum, learning styles and yearly scheduling, but become almost legalistic in the adherence to schooling in the morning.

Have you ever seriously considered moving the bulk of your homeschooling to the afternoon? If you have night owls, it might make a huge difference in their enthusiasm and level of engagement. Research shows starting later might even be especially better for teenagers. Even if you don’t push it all to the afternoon, choosing to start later in the morning might be an improvement.

Unless the laws in your state require you to do school in the morning (and I’ve never heard of it being so), you can do your learning whenever it works best for your family. That’s why for quite some time we homeschooled primarily in the afternoon and not the morning.

Something to consider if getting everyone started in the morning is a bit of a battle.

So there are three ways you can consider shaking up your homeschool routine a bit. Which one would make the biggest improvement in your home? Is there any advice people could share with you in the comments to help you implement the change?

Category: Homeschool PlanningTag: 5 Days to Re-Energize Your Homeschool

About Sallie Borrink

Sallie Schaaf Borrink is a wife, mother, homebody, and autodidact. She’s a published author, former teacher, and former campus ministry staff member. Sallie owns a home-based graphic design and web design business with her husband (DavidandSallie.com).

You Might Also Like

A Sample Kindergarten Homeschool Schedule for a Creative, Dreamer Child

5 Reasons Why We Love Our Homeschool Co-op

Why I Homeschool In The Afternoon and Not The Morning

Previous Post:5 Days To Re-Energize Your Homeschool
Next Post:Creative Ways to Re-Energize Your Homeschool Space

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Dianna

    Monday, July 21, 2014 at 6:21 pm

    I had to laugh at throwing morning school out the window. You’re right. I like to have the house relatively straight before we get started with school ….. with breakfast, getting dressed, and chores, our school starts around 10! 🙂

    I love that you’re offering moms grace … to break out of this ‘do it like everyone else’ mode.

    Reply
  2. Natasha

    Friday, April 10, 2015 at 2:06 am

    I enjoyed reading this. I don’t feel so weird now. My daughter tends to work better in the afternoon and evenings. We do it quite often. Plus she goes to dance classes 4 to 5 days a week that we work around.

    I love knowing we do not have to school like everyone else and not be as rigid as the public schools. Lots of plans ahead for more success!

    Reply
  3. Crystal Dawn

    Wednesday, July 20, 2022 at 6:51 pm

    We are all over the place with starting and stopping on a daily basis. I need to start in the morning or I don’t do things. My mornings set the pace for the rest of the day. So I start school with the older boys who are early risers. I’m not crack of dawn. I mean they will wake up earlier than my late risers.

    Anyway, I get to them stuff we need to do intensively one on one, like composition and math, before most of the household is up. I work with the younger kids and lastly those who sleep in. This staggering approach has really helped.

    We do the yearly 4 days all year except natural family breaks (ie sick days, holidays, appointments, vacations). I had heard of year round, but I still felt like a meanie for not “scheduling” weeks off. I have found that we get out of the routine too easily and I don’t know how to “schedule” periods of “off” time.

    My kids work a few hours getting what we need to get academically and the rest of their time is unschooling of a sorts. They find their own interests and everyone helping with family life brings in the life skills everybody needs. School days just are not overwhelmingly intensive for any one kid. We don’t formally do subjects that they know an adult level about.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Natasha Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

 

Thank you for your comment. I read and appreciate each one even if I am unable to respond.

Sidebar

Sallie Schaaf Borrink

For 20+ years, I’ve been writing about following Jesus Christ and making choices based on what is true, beautiful, and eternal. Through purposeful living, self-employment, and homeschooling, our family has learned that freedom comes from a commitment to examine all of life and think for yourself. 

I hope you will join me here where we discuss all of life each day.

Categories

Search

Access all of my Premium Content for just $10/month

All of my printables for just $37!

Popular Today

  • Popular-Today-List-Avatar-SB-GIRL-80×80Forum
  • What Was In The Envelopes At President Bush’s Funeral SIMPLEWhat Was In The Envelopes At President Bush’s Funeral?
  • A colorful image of sacred geometry related to MegatronExplaining Metatron from an Orthodox/Historical Christian Perspective
  • Free Great Lakes Map Printable POSTFree Great Lakes Map for Homeschoolers
  • Tickler List for Premium ContentTickler List for Premium Content
  • Classical Conversations Negatives and Why We Didn’t Join SIMPLEClassical Conversations Negatives and Why We Didn’t Join
  • Removing Distractions - Using FreeTube on Linux SIMPLEUsing FreeTube on Linux & Removing Distractions
  • Come, Little Leaves by George Cooper – Printable Poetry SIMPLE“Come, Little Leaves” by George Cooper | Printable Poem
  • Fresh ingredients for Autoimmune Protocol comfort food recipesThe Ultimate List of AIP Comfort Food Recipes
  • Christian Women Who Love Wallowing in Sin SIMPLEChristian Women Who Love Wallowing In Sin
  • The Deliberate Generations-Long War To Eliminate White People SIMPLEWhy Is There a Deliberate Generations-Long War To Eliminate White People?
  • Trump was shotAssassination Attempt on President Trump in Pennsylvania




A Christian Nation

"The real object of the first amendment was not to countenance, much less to advance, Mahometanism, or Judaism, or infidelity, by prostrating Christianity; but to exclude all rivalry among christian sects, and to prevent any national ecclesiastical establishment, which should give to a hierarchy the exclusive patronage of the national government."

Joseph Story (Associate Justice of the Supreme Court), Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (1833), § 1871.

countenance: To favor; to encourage by opinion or words; To encourage; to appear in defense (Websters Dictionary 1828)




What Can I Help You Find Today?

Home

About Sallie

Contact

Privacy Policy

Disclaimers & Disclosures

Tags

Premium Content

Subscribe

Comments

Forum

Make a Donation

My Printables Shop

The Lifetime Pass

My Account

Cart

Lost Password Help

Digital Products Terms of Use

Rebuilding America

Free Printables

Unit Studies & Learning Themes

Homeschooling

Copyright © 2005–2026 · Sallie Schaaf Borrink · All Rights Reserved · Powered by Mai Theme

Scroll Up
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.