Curriculum & Learning Approaches
There is no one right way
to educate your child.
Structured curriculum, child-led learning, project-based exploration, or a mix of everything — every approach is valid. We review them all honestly so you can find what actually fits your family.
Affiliate disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. We earn a small commission at no cost to you. Our reviews are always our own honest opinion.
Six Approaches
Which approach fits your family?
None of these are better than the others. Many families blend two or three. Most families evolve their approach over time. Read each one and notice what feels like relief — that’s usually a sign you’re on the right track.
📚 Classical Curriculum
Buy it · Follow it · Done
A complete classical curriculum with lesson plans, materials, and a clear scope and sequence. Great for parents who want clear direction and kids who thrive with predictable routines.
Think: Veritas, Memoria Press, The Well Trained Mind, other classical programs
🌿 Charlotte Mason
Living books · Nature · Narration
Replace textbooks with living books, nature study, and short focused lessons. Emphasizes narration over testing. Gentle, rich, and deeply effective for curious kids.
Think: Simply CM, Ambleside Online (free), Brave Writer
🔨 Project-Based Learning
Dive deep · Build things · Real problems
Children choose a topic, question, or project and dive deep for days or weeks. Math, writing, research, and science emerge naturally through the work. Excellent for self-directed kids.
Think: Timberdoodle, STEM kits, maker spaces, interest-led units
🌱 Unschooling
Life is learning · Trust the process
No curriculum. Learning follows the child’s natural curiosity through real life — cooking, building, exploring, creating, questioning. Requires deep trust in the learning process.
Think: John Holt, Peter Gray, John Taylor Gatto’s ideas
🧱 Montessori
Child-centered · supportive · hands on
Student-centered approach focusing on independence, hands-on learning, and self-directed activity within a prepared environment.
Think: Simply Multisori, Hometessori, and Child of the Redwoods
🎨 Eclectic — Create Your Own
Take what works · Leave the rest
The most common approach among experienced homeschoolers. Mix structured math with CM literature, project-based science, and a healthy dose of real-life learning. Completely custom.
Think: This is what most homeschool families actually do
Recommended Time
How much “school time” does your child
actually need?
For 1-on-1 learning, children can cover more ground in 30-90 focused minutes than in a full school day of 30 students. These are honest, research-informed guides — not minimums to feel guilty about missing.
⭐ Remember: play, conversation, outdoor time, reading aloud, and real-life activities all count as learning. Always.
Ages 4–6
Early Childhood
20
min/day
→ Play is the curriculum
→ Reading aloud daily
→ No worksheets needed
→ Nature exploration
→ Songs, rhymes, movement
→ Real life is school
Ages 7–8
Early Elementary
45
min/day
→ Reading + math daily
→ Short focused sessions
→ Lots of read-aloud time
→ Hands-on projects
→ Plenty of free play
→ Nature journaling
Ages 9–10
Late Elementary
60
min/day
→ Core subjects focused
→ Interest-led afternoons
→ Begin writing practice
→ History through stories
→ Science experiments
→ Independent reading
Ages 11–12
Middle Elementary
90
min/day
→ Growing independence
→ More writing + analysis
→ Deeper subject dives
→ Co-op classes begin
→ Interest projects
→ Real-world learning
Ages 13–15
Middle School
2-3
hrs/day
→ Mostly self-directed
→ Transcript building begins
→ Dual enrollment options
→ Deep interest work
→ Real projects + portfolios
→ Community involvement
Ages 16–18
High School
3-4
hrs/day
→ Credit-based planning
→ Dual enrollment college
→ SAT/ACT prep optional
→ Portfolio or transcript
→ Internship/apprenticeship
→ Self-designed learning
The 1-on-1 advantage is real. A classroom teacher divides their attention among 25–30 students. You have one. Research on tutoring (Bloom’s 2-Sigma Effect) shows that 1-on-1 instruction produces results two standard deviations above the classroom average. Your child doesn’t need more hours — they need better hours. 20 focused minutes with a present, engaged parent beats two hours of worksheets every single time.
Build Your Own
How to create your own curriculum from scratch.
You don’t need to buy a boxed curriculum to have a great homeschool. Many of the most thriving homeschool families build their own approach from free and low-cost resources. Here’s how to do it well.
01
Start with your child, not a curriculum catalog
Before you buy or plan anything, spend one or two weeks just observing. What does your child naturally gravitate toward? What questions do they ask? What activities hold their attention for a long time? What frustrates them quickly? Your answers to these questions are more valuable than any curriculum reviewer’s opinion — because they’re about your specific child.
Try: Keep a notebook for two weeks. Write down what your child does, asks, builds, reads, and creates when left to their own devices.
02
Anchor to just two core subjects
Every homeschool needs consistent work in reading/language arts and math. Everything else is flexible. Choose one resource for each — free or paid — and do it consistently. That’s your curriculum. Everything else is enrichment.
Free math: Khan Academy, Math Mammoth, Life of Fred. Free reading: Library books, Librivox audiobooks, All About Reading (paid but worth it). Consistency matters more than the resource you choose.
03
Let everything else follow curiosity
Science, history, art, music, geography, social studies — these don’t need a formal curriculum, especially in the elementary years. Follow what your child is interested in. A child obsessed with dinosaurs is learning science, geology, biology, history, and geography. A child who loves cooking is learning math, chemistry, reading, and life skills. Trust the thread of curiosity.
Tools: Library cards, YouTube, documentaries, field trips, living books, nature walks, community classes, museum memberships.
04
Build in real-life and hands-on learning daily
Cooking, gardening, building, shopping, budgeting, fixing things, volunteering, caring for animals, navigating public spaces — all of this is education. Real-life learning is often the most memorable, the most meaningful, and the most transferable to adult life. It doesn’t need to be scheduled. It just needs to happen.
Wild + Free approach: Ask “what did we do today?” at dinner. You’ll be amazed how much learning happened that didn’t look like school at all.
05
Review and adjust every 6–8 weeks
Your homeschool is a living thing. What works in September may not work in February. Give any new approach 6 weeks before evaluating it — but don’t be afraid to change course when something clearly isn’t working. The flexibility to adjust is one of homeschooling’s greatest gifts. Use it.
Ask: Is my child growing? Are they curious? Are they happy? Are we connecting? If yes to most — you’re doing it right. The curriculum is just a vehicle.
Real Life Is Learning
What learning looks like outside the workbook.
These are everyday activities that teach real, lasting skills — no worksheet required. This list is inspired by the Wild + Free philosophy and the lived reality of eclectic homeschool families.
🍳
Math · Chemistry · Reading
Cooking and Baking Together
Fractions, measurement, following instructions, chemistry of reactions, nutrition. Every meal is a lesson.
🌱
Science · Biology · Patience
Gardening — Any Size
Plant biology, soil science, seasons, responsibility, patience, the life cycle. A pot of tomatoes teaches more than most science workbooks.
🛒
Math · Economics · Real Life
Grocery Shopping with a Budget
Comparing prices, calculating totals, understanding value, making decisions with limited resources. Real money math.
🔧
Engineering · Problem Solving
Building and Fixing Things
Legos, woodworking, fixing a bike, building a fort — spatial reasoning, problem-solving, persistence, and the satisfaction of making something work.
📖
Literacy · Vocabulary · Imagination
Read-Alouds at Any Age
Reading aloud to children at every age builds vocabulary, comprehension, imagination, and emotional intelligence. It’s the single highest-ROI activity in homeschooling.
🌳
Science · Observation · Wonder
Nature Time — Unstructured
Unstructured time outdoors teaches observation, patience, wonder, and a relationship with the natural world that no classroom can replicate. Even 20 minutes a day matters.
💰
Financial Literacy · Math
Managing Their Own Money
Allowance, saving goals, spending decisions — real financial literacy learned through real experience. Most adults were never taught this in school.
🗣️
Communication · Critical Thinking
Real Conversations
Discussing news, history, ethics, family decisions — children who are included in real conversations develop reasoning, empathy, and communication skills far beyond their peers.
🎭
Arts · Expression · Confidence
Creative Play and Making
Drawing, writing stories, putting on plays, making music, sculpting — creative expression builds confidence, emotional intelligence, and the ability to make something from nothing.
“The goal of education is not to fill a bucket, but to light a fire.” Children who are curious, confident, and connected to real life will figure out everything else. Your job is to keep the fire going.
Books Worth Reading
Homeschool philosophy books that will
change how you think.
These books won’t tell you what curriculum to buy. They’ll help you understand what education actually is — and give you the confidence to trust your instincts as a homeschool parent.
🌿
Wild + Free
Ainsley Arment
A beautifully written invitation to slow down, get outside, and trust that a childhood filled with wonder, nature, and real experiences is the best possible education.
Key idea: Children don’t need to be busy. They need to be free.
✅
Homeschooling
ginny yurich
A beautifully written invitation to slow down, get outside, and trust that a childhood filled with wonder, nature, and real experiences is the best possible education.
Key idea: Presence and consistency matter more than curriculum perfection.
📚
The Well-Trained Mind
Susan Wise Bauer
The guide to classical homeschooling. Even if you don’t go classical, this book will change how you think about what education can be. Dense but worth every page.
Key idea: The trivium — grammar, logic, rhetoric — mirrors child development beautifully.
🎯
Free to Learn
Peter Gray
A psychologist’s research-backed argument that children learn best through self-directed play and exploration — and that forcing children to sit and absorb information works against their nature.
Key idea: Play is not a break from learning. Play IS learning.
🏠
Home Grown
Ben Hewitt
A Vermont farmer’s account of raising unschooled children on a homestead. Not prescriptive — just a deeply honest, beautifully written story of what child-led learning can look like in real life.
Key idea: Children who are trusted to learn become deeply capable people.
🧠
Teach Your Own
John Holt & Pat Farenga
The original argument for unschooling from the educator who coined the term. Timeless, challenging, and full of profound observations about how children actually learn when left to themselves.
Key idea: Children are natural learners. Our job is to not get in the way.
Curriculum reviews
When you’re ready — here are our top picks.
If you’ve decided that packaged curriculum is right for your family — secular, faith-based, or something in between — here are our reviews.
Secular
No religious content. Neutral or science-based worldview. Great for all families.
Faith-Based
Christian worldview integrated throughout. Reviewed with the same honest lens.
All approaches are valid. All are reviewed transparently. We don’t favor one educational curriculum over another. Whether you homeschool secularly, from a Christian worldview, or somewhere in between — you’ll find unbiased reviews here.
Secular Reviews
Secular homeschool curriculum — our top picks.
These curricula contain no religious content and approach subjects from a neutral or science-based perspective. All families are welcome to use any of these regardless of their beliefs.
All subjects · K-12
Time4Learning
⭐⭐⭐⭐
A fully online, self-paced curriculum covering all core subjects. Lesson plans are built in, grading is automated, and kids can work independently. No religious content. Popular with families who want structure without the paper load.
Price: ~$375/year
best for: Independent learners, families wanting a complete digital solution
All subjects · K-8
Moving Beyond the Page
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
A literature-based, concept curriculum designed specifically for gifted and advanced learners. Rigorous and deeply engaging. Integrates all subjects around a central theme or concept — for kids who are bored by traditional curriculum.
Price: ~$860–$1,015/year
best for: advanced learners, literature-loving families, concept-based thinkers
All subjects · K-12
Oak Meadow
⭐⭐⭐⭐
A Waldorf-inspired secular curriculum emphasizing creativity, nature, arts integration, and child-led pacing. One of the few secular options that honors the whole child — head, heart, and hands. Gentle, flexible, and beautifully designed.
Price: ~$550–$750/year
best for: Creative learners, Waldorf-curious families, gentle homeschoolers
All subjects · K-8
Core Knowledge
⭐⭐⭐⭐
E.D. Hirsch’s knowledge-based curriculum — the What Your Grader Needs to Know series brought to life digitally. Builds a rich foundation of shared cultural and academic knowledge across history, science, literature, and the arts. Secular and completely free in digital form.
Price: FREE — digital only
best for: Knowledge-rich learning, families who love living books
All subjects · K-12
Khan Academy
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Mastery-based math from K through college, plus science, history, computing, SAT prep, and more. Secular, comprehensive, and used by millions of homeschool families as either a primary or supplemental curriculum. Nothing else free comes close.
Price: FREE — digital only
best for: All families — especially as a primary math spine or supplement
All subjects · K-12
CK-12
⭐⭐⭐⭐
Free customizable digital textbooks covering math, science, and social studies. Students can work at their own pace through interactive content, simulations, and adaptive practice. Excellent secular option for middle and high school — particularly strong in STEM subjects.
Price: FREE — digital only
best for: Middle and high school, STEM-focused families, budget homeschoolers
Faith-Based Reviews
Faith-based homeschool curriculum — our top choices.
These curricula integrate Christian faith throughout. Designed for families who want their worldview reflected in every subject. Reviewed with the same honesty we apply to all content.
All subjects · K-12
Simply Charlotte Mason
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Rooted in a Christian worldview — living books, narration, nature study, short lessons, and a gentle unhurried pace. One of the most beloved faith-based options in the homeschool community. Very flexible — use as much or as little as fits your family. Individual resources are affordable and the approach scales through high school.
Price: ~$225–$500/year
best for: Gentle learners, nature-loving families, Charlotte Mason beginners
All subjects · K-12
The Good and the Beautiful
⭐⭐⭐⭐
A beautifully designed, literature-rich curriculum with a strong Christian worldview and surprisingly affordable price. Language arts and history courses are the standout offerings. High production quality — the books themselves are gorgeous — and the philosophy emphasizes what is good, true, and beautiful in education.
Price: ~$225/year
best for: high-quality faith-based curriculum for a reasonable price
All subjects · K-12
BJU Press
⭐⭐⭐⭐
Bob Jones University Press — a South Carolina institution. One of the most academically rigorous faith-based curriculum options available. Thorough, structured, and explicitly Christian throughout every subject. The distance learning option adds video instruction. Highly comprehensive.
Price: ~$1,200/year
best for: Independent learners, families wanting a complete digital solution
All subjects · K-12
Abeka
⭐⭐⭐⭐
Traditional, structured, and explicitly Christian from cover to cover. One of the most widely used faith-based curricula in the country and particularly popular throughout South Carolina. Strong phonics program in the early grades. Buying used — on Facebook Marketplace, eBay, or local co-op sales — cuts the cost dramatically.
Price: ~$685–$1,670/year
best for: Traditional learners, structured families, SC families with community support
All subjects · K-12
Classical Conversations
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Community is built into the curriculum — families meet weekly in a campus setting with trained tutors. Multiple campuses operating in the Greenville and Spartanburg areas. The social and community component makes this uniquely valuable for families who want co-op built in from day one.
Price: ~$720+/year
best for: Community-oriented families, classical learners, families new to the Upstate looking for immediate community
All subjects · K-12
Easy Peasy All-in-One
⭐⭐⭐⭐
Written by a homeschool mom, Easy Peasy covers all core subjects from K through 12 from a faith-based perspective. Not flashy, but genuinely comprehensive and used by thousands of families as their primary curriculum. The purchase options add printable workbooks and offline access for a modest fee.
Price: Free–$125/year
best for: Budget families wanting a complete faith-based solution, families just starting out
Side by side
All approaches at a glance.
Every approach has strengths. Many families blend two or three. Use this as a starting point — not a rulebook.
|
Approach |
Structure |
Cost |
Parent Prep |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Structured Curriculum |
High — all planned |
$0–$1700+/yr |
Low — follow the guide |
|
Charlotte Mason |
Medium — flexible days |
$0–$250/yr |
Medium — curate books |
|
Project-Based |
Low — topic-driven |
$0–$100+/yr |
Medium — facilitate projects |
|
Unschooling |
None — child-led |
$0–$50+/yr |
High — rich environment |
|
Montessori |
Low — child-driven |
$0–$500+/yr |
High — parent set up |
|
Eclectic/Create Your Own |
Custom — your choice |
$0–$300+/yr |
Medium — curate & adjust |
Not sure where to start?
Grab our free Curriculum & Learning Guide — part of the New Homeschooler’s Starter Kit — which walks you through finding your family’s approach before you spend a dollar.