Last week, I shared a sample curriculum for a biblical classical education for little ones. Our family includes two early knowledge-stage sons (3 years and 7 years), a late knowledge-stage daughter (nearly 10 years), and an understanding-stage son (12 years). While routines and schedules will vary for each family, depending upon ages, temperaments, and family needs, I am often asked to share ours. I highly recommend you also compare the sample schedules in Teaching the Trivium; they include more oral reading, which is to be desired.
All times are approximate. We live by routine, not by schedule.
6 am Mom rises to drink coffee (awful diet!) and to write; children begin waking and doing chores.
7:30 Mom or daughter makes breakfast.
8:00 Bible time – memory verses, sometimes a hymn, and a chapter of Scripture.
8:30 Academic read-aloud and discussion. Currently we are reading Revealing Arithmetic (a biblical understanding of math concepts) and Signs & Seasons (biblical classical astronomy). The three-year-old plays happily on the floor with his toy soldiers.
9:30 Mom exercises in privacy and gets dressed while older three finish chores, practice their instruments, and/or begin academics.Three-year-old plays in the backyard with sticks, screaming that since he is a Roman soldier, all the barbarians must die.
10:30 I give one of the older three a music lesson (they each take piano and violin/viola). The Roman soldier streaks by, wondering if I have seen the “rocket men.”
11am I sit at the kitchen table with the three older children while they do their pencil work. They hand me their folders with completed papers, and I check their math (Saxon), grammar (aBeka), and logic (Critical Thinking Press). I answer questions and correct misunderstandings here. The Roman soldier may wander into the family room beside us and look at picture books. If I am caught up with grading, I’ll join him.
12pm The famished family puts aside learning for lunch. While we eat, I read aloud. Sometimes classic literature, sometimes a biography, sometimes from The Book of Virtues, sometimes something silly.
1pm Rest time. Silence. Everyone to their rooms, to their beds. Little Roman soldier sleeps; everyone else may read, finish studies quietly, or sleep. I read for an hour (rotating assortment of review books/book studies doing with my children/classic literature/home education/something interesting from the library).
I’m doing two book discussions – one with my daughter, and one with my oldest son. So now is when I’ll take a half-hour so to chat about our reading. Daughter likes to meet over tea and cookies (stupid diet!); son likes to lay in the backyard and discuss while throwing sticks.
2pm Rest time, still. I write some more.
3pm The hoards begin to break forth. If they have finished their responsibilities, they may play. Oldest son finds work around the house to complete his “two hours of hard manual labor” for the day; both he and his younger brother are working for the neighbor, too. I finish up some correspondence.
4pm House Honcho. No one escapes – all must help tidy the house for Dad’s arrival and do the day’s housekeeping tasks.
5pm Finish my to-do list/practice my instruments/rest/collapse in my recliner ….
6pm Begin dinner. Sometimes my daughter cooks. : )
7:30 Daddy arrives/dinner time
8pm Bible time with Daddy around the dinner table, then BED TIME!
This is a “normal day” (what is normal?) with no illness, no errands, no visitors, no interruptions, no educational trips. So, in other words, this never happens. But it is the basic routine.
On days we run errands or plan an educational trip, we attempt to begin the routine up to the time we leave the house. Sometimes we take studies in the car to do, but I’ve found that counter-productive. No one learns well, we all get car-sick, and good conversation about life events is squashed. Since we are year-round learners, we don’t feel the pressure to get papers done every day or meet any deadlines.
I am constantly tweaking our routine. As children develop responsibility, children are born and grow, illness comes and goes, and other changes come into the family, the routine should be flexible for the needs of the day. As the mother, my job is to make sure the routine is our servant, not our cruel task master.
Keep it fun! Let the learning lifestyle fit the family God gave you.
Shanda says
I enjoyed reading about your routine, Lea Ann. I’m currently sitting on the couch with the children all around me…some eating breakfast, some watching Curious George, and one little baby playing quietly. Soon we will start our studies. I just love my life and I know you love yours, too. What a blessing to be able to keep our children at home to learn and grow. I have no appointments today, but may have to run to the store later on. Have a great day!
Sarah says
Thank you for the example! We are in the process of adjusting (or should I say finding) a workable routine. Had a decent one; then Daddy switched working hours.
La-arni says
Thanks, Lea, for sharing this. Just wanting to let you know I love reading your posts. Thanks for always being an encouragement.
Jenny says
Thanks again for helping your brain-fried friend! I shared these two posts w/a lady who is new to our Special Needs Homeschooling group, whose son is same age as Dr. J. Hopefully she’ll click on over! 🙂
Trisha says
Thanks for the House Honcho nod! I love your site.
Keep it simple. 🙂
–Trisha
amyleebell says
Thanks for posting this! I am in need of rethinking my own schedule, and this is the kind of motivation I needed to get started. I am glad that you included excercise in your schedule. That’s one of the things that I always think I will do, but I never get around to it. Reading your schedule makes me realize that I need to make it a priority. It’s also inspiring to see that you have music lessons and practice built in. I give my son a lesson occasionally, but I don’t remember to do it very often. It’s a wonder he can remember anything between lessons! Thanks for the inspiration!
Nicole says
Okay, curious Q: What does Texas require for student assessment; evaluation by a teacher or testing? How do you prepare for that?
Lea Ann Garfias says
Texas is, in my opinion, the number 1 state in which to homeschool. It is one reason my husband chose this state to relocate our family several years ago. There are virtually no regulations; homeschools are treated as private schools under the law and are exempt from government oversite and control. You can read more about Texas home education freedoms here: http://www.thsc.org/Categories.aspx?Id=Homeschooling