• Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Activity, Change, Progress

  • HOME
  • How to
    • Preschool
    • Kindergarten
    • Middle School
    • High School
  • Planner
  • Lapbooks
    • Trioramas
    • History Games
  • Shop
  • GET STARTED NOW!
    • Learning Styles
  • 7 Step Planner
    • DIY Best Student Planner
    • Free & Easy DIY Home Management Binder
  • Unit Studies
    • Creation to Ancients
    • Middle Ages to Reform
    • Exploring to Revolution
    • World Wars to Today
    • Science
    • Free Art Curriculum Grades 1 – 8
  • Curriculum
    • More Unit Studies
    • Geography
    • Writing PreK to 12th
    • Geronimo Stilton
  • BootCamp
    • Resources
      • Dynamic Subscriber Freebies
      • Exclusive Subscribers Library
      • Ultimate Unit Study Planner

Teach/Which Subjects to Teach/Cover EVERYTHING

What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them? Part 3 of 3

August 10, 2015 | 1 Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

What Homeschool Subjects to Teach And Does It Matter When I Teach Them Part 3 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them?

Day 1.What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them?
Day 2. What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them?

In one of our co-ops, the kids learned to sing Greensleeves.

Once they learned the words and melody it was the most beautiful and soothing sound to hear them sing again and again. I feel your homeschooling day can be the same way when each subject complements the other.

An important point to keep in mind regarding the skill subjects like reading, writing and arithmetic is that just because your child is doing well now does not mean he has mastered that skill.

HOMESCHOOL TWO STEP DANCE

Learning takes place in a three steps forward, take two back ritual.

That is why we wonder sometimes what happened to them when they had “it” once, but now forgot it.

Information needs to be introduced at one time, but later it becomes mastered or it becomes part of their learning cycle.

Like an orchestra or singing Greensleeves, it required several rehearsals.

Each time, we focused on different parts of the songs or music until it was finely tuned. Your subjects need to be the same way.

So do not be so quick to discontinue phonics early. Even if your child is a good reader, keep on with phonics until the 4th grade or even 5th grade. Phonics is more than just about reading, it’s about spelling too.

Knowing basic letter sounds is just touching the fringe of learning phonics. It includes learning how to change endings on words. Changing the ending on a word, for example, like “act” to “actor” changes the meaning completely.

As mentioned, phonics is about spelling too and not just reading. It involves the connection between letters and their spelling. Continuing spelling until 8th grade can be sufficient for most children, however, if your child is still struggling continue through to high school. I have now stopped teaching my oldest son spelling however I do hold him accountable for each word he writes. In this way, he can focus on the words that may still give him problems.

Math is one of those subjects that I feel should continue all the way through highschool and not stop in the first two years of high school. Why? Math is a subject that is so logical. I certainly did not feel that way in the beginning because math was not my strong subject.

However, much like learning a foreign language with a code and set of rules, you can begin to understand the language. The logic and thinking skills that a student acquires in the study of math can serve him lifetime regardless of whether he goes to college or not.

Grammar is a tool to use for composition, but I have always been of the mind set that emphasis should be placed first on writing instead of grammar. Grammar has taken a back seat in my journey, starting formally in 3rd grade for us.

Of course, basic grammar has always been applied early on but applied more formally when my sons are composing.

Composition cannot be enjoyed unless attention is given to penmanship early on and first. What child can enjoy composing beautiful thoughts or silly ones if just holding a pencil or pen causes discomfort?

Many children have needs that need to be addressed regarding fine motor skill, however, many do not. It simply has been a lack of sticking to some kind of writing daily or fun activities to strengthen those fine motor skills.

Daily, if you will give attention to penmanship with tiny baby steps, your child will be well above others for the simple fact he can compose more than one well written paragraph.

History, science, Bible, field trips, game playing and co-ops are at the heart of any enriching program.

Science is not about vocabulary words but out hands on experiments, questioning and investigation.

History is not about dead people, but about the way they lived. What they inspired others to do.

Can you make it come alive by attending reenactments, doing a lapbook, cooking recipes of that time period and wearing costumes. We do and please hear me, I am NOT the crafty mom. But I know that passion on a subject, starts from a spark of interest.

How to Fit It All In a Homeschool Day?

The Bible is a subject that is just part of our daily life but some do include it as a formal subject.

The last tip I want to share is WHEN to do all of this.

IF you school year around, then you can divide up your year into two big chunks of learning.

Along about January, I switch out subjects. I may start one subject in summer and end at this time of the year around November or December just in time to start another one in January.

That is another tool we have in homeschooling – flexibility. Be sure to use it. If you need to stop and not do one subject like history, science or geography for a few months to concentrate on another, do that.

Then by the end of your year, you will have introduced or mastered more areas or subjects.

Have your child taste all the subjects and do not become lopsided even if you feel you like one more than another.

We all like one or more subjects than another, but the point is we want a well rounded out harmonious sound at the end of our homeschooling journey.

Do you have a starting point for knowing which homeschool subjects to cover and when?

Did you miss the other two posts?

  • What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them? Part 2 of 3
  • What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them? Part 1 of 3

Hugs to you today,

1 CommentFiled Under: Teach/Which Subjects to Teach/Cover EVERYTHING Tagged With: homeschool subjects

What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them? Part 2 of 3

August 9, 2015 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

What Homeschool Subjects to Teach And Does It Matter When I Teach Them. Part 2 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

In What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them Part 1, I laid out the general subjects to cover and gave you a rule of thumb as to when to cover them.

As you can see from that subject list that subjects like art, music, foreign language and physical education, to name a few were not included. Why?

Foolproof Way to Choose Homeschool Subjects

This does not mean that they are not important, but it does mean that you determine their importance in your family’s journey.

Should the subjects go above the line (see my document on Part 1) or below the line?

Above the line subjects are vital to your family’s goals or essential and without them you feel your child would not receive a superior education. And below the line are subjects that are important, but may not be necessary to meet your goal in education.

This reminds me of a homeschool family that I helped that were mostly interested in physical education and scholarships for their son for football.

The whole family was athletic and such a joy to support. However, art ranked very low on their family’s goals.

To meet their family’s goal, physical education had to take up a good part of their day after the 3 Rs.

The point in all of this is that the subjects listed on Part 1 are to give you the framework and are at the core of a superior education. After that, you need to determine the importance of other subjects to your family.

Switching gears on you now because I want to hone in on language arts and give you some specifics about it.

Out of all the subjects, it seems that language arts is the area that needs to be demystified.

There seems to be this cloud of uncertainty as to what language arts is and what it compromises of in any grade.

Language arts at its very basic meaning simply means these four areas:

1. Spelling

2. Reading

3. Writing

4. Grammar

As you can see those subjects will draft in other ones like phonics and vocabulary.

For example, a child cannot read well unless he has some phonics and that phonics cannot stop in the first or second grade just because a child is advanced or already reading chapter books.

Phonics has many levels and the basic level is letter recognition and sounds. It has been my experience that some children do well by studying phonics intensely while reading and others focus on reading and understand phonics as they go along.

I have seen some programs continue until fourth grade as well. The point is that phonics is part of the core subjects that make up the 3 Rs and without a good foundation in these subjects a child may not be equipped for lifelong learning.

Too, vocabulary is needed if your child wants to write well and understand what he is reading.

It may not need to be a separate subject. I feel vocabulary is best taught in the context of what the child is reading and not as a separate subject, unless of course you have the time to do so.

Mastering Homeschool Subjects

Then writing includes both penmanship and composition.

In the early grades, penmanship is what we want to achieve so that soon thereafter the mechanics of writing will be mastered and so that the child can now focus on composing his thoughts.

A well written composition is no easy task but harder yet if the basics of penmanship are not mastered.

Do not wait to teach penmanship until later grades.

By grade three, you want your child to be comfortable with the mechanics of writing.

In my journey, I taught all of my sons cursive first and used a simplified version of cursive since I was not impressed with the superfluous cursive I had been taught. By third grade, cursive was mastered.

Two of the reasons children dislike penmanship is that it is not taught early enough so that they have time to fine tune their motor skills and the other is that a parent may choose an old fashion traditional cursive script like the Palmer method and that could add to the struggle.

I used a version of simple script by Calvert, which combined the easy use of print on cap letters and it was free of a lot of the extra curves and lines that the Palmer method of traditional cursive that I learned in school.

Simplified Cursive Alphabet @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Each kid mastered the script as I taught it to them.

Mastering Cursive @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Penmanship gets a bum rap because I hear moans from parents and kids alike, but the secret is to introduce it early and be consistent each day.

It’s not a skill that you do once a week. Penmanship should be one or two well written sentences every day with the focus on neatness and legibility.

Master Cursive Writing @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

When you wait until third grade, the child’s writing habits, good or bad are already formed and so it’s hard to add composition on top of that.

Then when it is time to teach composition, your child is not frustrated because he lacks the basics of penmanship and he can now focus on penning his beautiful thoughts.

Reading is another subject that can be misunderstood. From the beginning there should be an emphasis on the purpose of reading.

No, it’s not just about comprehension.

Homeschool Curriculum Helps

Comprehension is important, but to form a love for reading into adulthood a child has to view it as pleasure. Constant worksheets and record keeping of what he is reading does not inspire a child to want to read into adult hood.

Boy or Girl? Teaching Reading Needs to Be Different

Reading changes after about grade 4 from learning how to read to reading to learn, a big difference.

Some children, especially girls are very early and mature readers and can be reading well by the age of four or so. Boys normally struggle on until about 8 years of age until they master reading.

When I first started teaching my sons to read, I didn’t like the statistics I read about how boys are normally behind girls when learning to read. My focus was to be sure my boys didn’t fall by the side and it was my goal for them to read early and to love it.

With a lot of hard work and not missing any precious days when they were little, I got pretty close to my target. I had two early readers and one that read later, but then again I learned that personality plays a huge part with boys too.

Once each of my sons reached the significant milestone of reading, then I could focus on other areas of learning and their appetite can now be satisfied as to what interests them in their education.

Geography, history and science are important to cover, but you may miss the small window of time needed with the core subjects because you focused so much on subjects that can wait a bit.

Do you see now why content subjects {geography, history and science} can wait later?

There are only so many hours in the days and when your day is prioritized with giving core subjects time first, you are making time for the subjects that will equip him for a lifetime of learning.

Then again, I do have secret teaching tips on how to cover core subjects and learn to read or write, but I will save that for another book post, lest I write a book here.

All of this I put in a nutshell for you, but I am hoping it will help you see where you may need to include another subject or move ahead in one area.

In Part 3, I will talk about some of your concerns like time needed in each subject and how to plan multiple subjects.

Also, Part 3 will put all of this together and like a beautiful orchestra that is harmonious you can see your child’s accomplishment in each subject.

Can you start fine tuning your subjects and prioritizing them by importance to your family?

Homeschooling Multiple Children Secret Planning Sheet @ Tinas Dynamic Homeschool Plus - Copy - Copy (2)

Remember, they can’t have all the same importance. Some homeschool subjects have to go below the line. I have another help for you.

Download Homeschooling Multiple Children Not So Secret Planning Sheet Here.

Grab this form and start planning your subjects. Fill it in and determine if you have over planned or under planned or if you think you have a doable plan that can be accomplished for the day.

Hugs and love ya,

Grab some of these other reads:

Teaching Handwriting When Homeschooling the Early Years Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3.
Teaching Homeschooled Boys How to Read – When to Panic
How to Use a History Spine to Build Your Own Study of History

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Teach/Which Subjects to Teach/Cover EVERYTHING Tagged With: homeschool subjects

What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them? Part 1 of 3

August 8, 2015 | 5 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

What homeschool subjects to teach and when to teach them is a huge fear factor for any new homeschooler or those struggling with the how tos of homeschooling. Too, sometimes as veteran homeschoolers, we just need the reminders.

What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them? Part 1 of 3

Without prior teaching experience, it’s easy enough to figure out the 3 R’s. But beyond that, making sure I covered homeschool subjects well and knowing when to move on was uncharted territory for me.

Homeschool Subjects

Then, the second half to my struggle was wondering just when do I teach homeschool subjects.

At what age should I introduce certain subjects?

Questions like when to teach spelling and what grade to continue it through were equally baffling to me. How about phonics, that is just teaching letter sounds right?

I didn’t even think about dividing my year into semesters when planning.

For example, should my year look the same way from beginning to end? Can I just teach one subject for one semester and a completely different one or two for another semester?

TO BOLDLY GO WHERE OTHERS HAVE BEEN BEFORE (okay, okay)

How do I plan and get all these subjects in? How much is enough of one subject?

I hope over the next three articles to relieve some of your fear and stress as to what homeschool subjects to teach and when.

Also, providing help so you plan your year and for you to think like an educator is another goal I have in this three part series.

As far as the very basic and essential subjects of any rigorous program, math and language arts will be your spine all the way from pre-k to high school.

In the next post, I will tackle language arts for you. Breaking it down to individual pieces as far as explaining what subjects make up language arts, which will give you a more clearer picture of it.

So let me throw out these subjects and give you an idea of when to begin to teach subjects, grade wise.

One last heads up for you and that is I am not wanting to set up compulsory education.

We both know, you and I left that kind of thinking to have the flexibility of homeschooling. But what I do want to do is to give you specifics and a place to start.

Many articles tout generalities and that never really helped me much because I was just as confused or more so before I started reading the article.

What is Your Twelve Year Plan for Homeschool?

If I had specifics, a guideline or rule of thumb, then I could make the right choices for my family within some guidelines or a rule of thumb. I hope you do the same for your precious family.

Two Step Homeschool Planning

Look at this list below and try to reason out why certain subjects can wait for certain grades. I won’t leave you hanging long because I will explain the reason behind some of this in the next two articles.

For now, just wrap your mind around your 12 year homeschool plan.

  • Math – Prek to 12th
  • Penmanship – Prek to 4th
  • Phonics – Prek to 3rd
  • Composition – 3rd to 4th
  • Grammar – 3rd to 12th
  • Spelling – 3rd to 8th
  • Teaching Reading – Prek to 4th
  • Literature – 5th to 12th
  • Vocabulary 4th to 12th
  • Bible – Infancy to adult
  • History- 3rd to 12th
  • Geography – 3rd to 12th
  • Science – 3rd to 12th

The very basic first step in your planning along with looking over the homeschool subjects is to know what is required by law in the state or country you live in.

The second step is to B R O A D E N your view of what is homeschool curriculum and that is where I help you out in the form below.

Have you grabbed my curriculum planning sheet where I make it easy for you by providing a map? Grab it below and simmer on my broadened definition of what is curriculum.

Fill out the top part about what is the required curriculum and look below at the visual where I explain the differences in subjects.

Above the pink line are essential subjects and though subjects below the line are important, if you are overwhelmed, have a limited budget or are new to homeschooling, those subjects can simmer for a bit.

Curriculum Planning Sheet - Add requirements @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus and New Bee Homeschooler

Curriculum Planning Sheet – Add requirements @ Tina’s Dynamic Homeschool Plus and New Bee Homeschooler

Does this list help you?

Any guesses why some of these subjects can wait and some you want to start right away?

Be in the know, read my other two posts here:

  • What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them? Part 2 of 3
  • What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them? Part 3 of 3

What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them? Part 1 of 3

You’ll also love these other tips:

  • 5 Tips on Teaching Homeschool Subjects I Loathe
  • Homeschooling Kindergarten: What Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them?
  • Skill Subjects Vs. Content Subjects: What’s the Difference? Why It’s Important to Know
  • 100 Reasons Why Homeschooling is a SUPERIOR Education
  • How to Begin Homeschooling A Teen Lagging Behind
  • What to Expect When You Expect to Homeschool (25 Silliest Questions Ever)
  • How To Start Homeschooling the Easy No Stress Way (Maybe)

Hugs and love ya,

What Homeschool Subjects to Teach And Does It Matter When I Teach Them @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them? Part 1 of 3
What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them? Part 1 of 3

5 CommentsFiled Under: Teach/Which Subjects to Teach/Cover EVERYTHING

How can I be sure I cover EVERYTHING this year?

April 19, 2015 | 18 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

When I hear the question how can I be sure I cover EVERYTHING this year, my mind flashes back to my many years of homeschooling when I too felt the same way.

Teaching EVERYTHING In Your Homeschool

One point I stress is to be balanced in your teaching. This is important because it gives you a changed direction to your efforts.

Switch your direction from checking off a list of subjects for the day to intentionally teaching educational independence.

Instead of focusing on EVERYTHING,  focus on the skills your children need to have so they can learn ANYTHING.

This is a completely different concept from the way most kids have been taught up to the time you begin homeschooling.

How can I be sure I cover EVERYTHING this year?

Teach your children to be independent instead of daily spoon feeding.

We already do it if you think about it.

For example, the other day Tiny tried to ask me a question, which he should have known. 

Instead of looking up what a word meant, he wanted me to simply tell him the answer.

Each situation is different and at times, I do explain what a word means.

But as the teacher, I also knew what kind of effort he had been putting forth in writing his composition for the day.

He was in a get it over with mood because his mind was more interested in the games he could play later after school.

Instant Education – Do Our Children Pay the Price?

Teaching him to value his independent learning time and also because I knew the meaning of the word would stick, I required him to look up the word.

Yes, it would have been easier for me to give him the answer so that he could finish with his composition and move on to the next subject, but in the process I would not be teaching him everything.

It is not even realistic nor a trait of modesty to think we will teach our children everything.

When our eagerness turns to anxiety, it can have a devastating affect on our children.

Personally, I never thought that pushing EVERYTHING onto my children as being a lack of modesty on my part because I certainly did not know everything.

What was I teaching my children? That we could read a few books and be an expert in that subject? Certainly not.

Also, my pushing an everything education at them might be depriving my children of a childhood because I expected instant performance.

The public educational system is in a hurry to label our children as behind, ahead, gifted or whatever new politically correct term that will arrive in the future.

Skills our children will need are ones that will last a life time like reading, math, research skills. and technical know-how in this modern age.

Too, whenever did life skills and plain practical sense like opening a bank account, trying to live a debt free life, running a household, making good decisions as the head of a household ever be counted as less important?

Are we raising dependent or educated independent children?

Harmonious Homeschool

Do you know that some children do not know how to use a library let alone research resource materials?

Equipping our children to weigh valuable resources found on the internet versus valueless ones is vital today.

With the amount of information overload we have access to, kids need to know the difference.

Children’s dictionaries, student dictionaries, rhyming dictionaries, thesauri, encyclopedias and atlases are resources that are priceless as we teach our children a lifelong love of learning.

Too we want resources that give us an idea of basic subjects because we don’t want to compromise our rigorous standards.

The most basic subjects are arithmetic, language arts, history and science.

Public schools nowadays cut back on subjects that also enrich our lives.

Enrichment, the very thing that causes children to accelerate in their education is the first thing stripped from it.

In homeschooling, we can add art, foreign language, drama, PE, dance, 4H and sports.

All of these subjects help to round out our children but more important they instill an appetite for learning everything that is not easily quenched.

Curriculum, course of studies, and checklists are just guides, but they don’t take importance over the goals we have set for our family.

Therein lies the secret to equipping our children with everything they need to know.

When looking back now, it’s liberating to know that teaching children how to learn everything they want to know is easier than I even imagined.

Self-Education. Expert or Novice Status

The key was to give them the freedom to explore what interests them and then give them keys to self-education.

There are those that will always scoff at the ideas of self-education thinking and that we only cover broad strokes.

It has been my experience that a scholar can be born from a slacker and infused to knowing everything about the details of any subject he deems worth to cover.

So next time someone asks you how are you going to teach EVERYTHING, let them know you don’t have to.

How can I be sure I cover EVERYTHING this year?

We don’t know everything. You are leading them to teach themselves ANYTHING they want to know.

Beside, we were made to learn lifelong and not in just the short few years our children reach high school and graduate.

How do you answer those who ask you about homeschooling gaps?

Look at these other helps and tips:

  • Controlling the Time Spent on Homeschool Subjects or Running a Homeschooling Boot Camp
  • Am I Doing Enough When Homeschooling
  • How to Know What A Homeschooled Child Should Learn Yearly?
  • How to Teach Homeschool Preschool From the Inside Out (And Preschool Skills)
  • Homeschool High School The Must Cover Subjects Part 1
  • Homeschool High School The Must Cover Subjects Part 2
  • 35 Simple But Powerful American History Homeschool Resources K to 12
  • How to Choose the BEST Homeschool Middle and High School Language Arts Curriculum & Options
  • How to Build Elementary Homeschool Curriculum Directly From Amazon
  • 15 Old-Fashioned Useful Skills Homeschoolers Love To Teach

Hugs and love ya,

Signature T
How Can I Be Sure I Cover EVERYTHING This Year @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

18 CommentsFiled Under: Teach/Which Subjects to Teach/Cover EVERYTHING Tagged With: homeschool, homeschool challenges, homeschool crisis, homeschool joy, homeschool joys, homeschool lifestyle, homeschool mistakes

Homeschooling Kindergarten: What Subjects to Teach and For How Long?

March 7, 2015 | 29 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Giving you practical advice on homeschooling kindergarten, what subjects to teach and for how long, now that all of my boys have moved well past kindergarten gives me a different perspective than giving advice in the moment, which may or may not have been helpful. You’ll love the tips on my page kindergarten homeschool curriculum.

Homeschooling Kindergarten

I always prefer giving you specifics, which were way more helpful to me than generalities.

In helping a lot of homeschool moms plan their kindergarten day, one thing a lot of them had in common was over planning academic subjects.

Homeschooling Kindergarten: What Subjects to Teach and For How Long?

Let me back up first and tell you how I felt when I started homeschooling kindergarten with my first son, Mr. Senior 2013.

I wished that I could say that I was reasonable, balanced, and unafraid when I started with my kindergartner. I was not.

I was terrified that if I didn’t start the formal learning part of kindergarten on time or earlier that my son was simply going to be behind and evermore I would ruin his chances for success as an adult.

Focusing on more scare tactics I read than practical advice, I made the mistake a lot of parents do which is to rush the part of learning that comes with kindergarten, which is to play.


It’s ugly to admit, but I wasn’t the mom interested in if he was delighting in learning, I was only interested if I could prove what he was learning. Ouch!

Going one step further to reveal my twisted attitude, I thought that moms, who spent their day doing crafts with their kids didn’t have the same goals I had, which were rigorous standards. There I said it.

In my defense though those feelings were coming out of a heart of love. I wanted to be a conscientious homeschool mom because like you, I wanted the best for my son.

Kindergarten Beginnings

This is the very opposite of the way I feel today.

It is a privilege to learn and I will take a child any day with an almost unquenchable resolve to learn over one who only cares about getting finished.

Would you believe me if I told you it starts in kindergarten?

That is how important your beginnings.

You can nurture a scholar who basks in learning and then rigorous learning comes OR you can raise a learner who resents academics because you feed a “show me the results” attitude only.

Part of the hard time I had in kindergarten was that my son, though I didn’t fully understand it at the time until he got around other kindergartners, was advanced for his age. I was told at public school that he was gifted as the term was used then.

Did you know that this is common for some homeschoolers to have high achieving children?

Many times I hear moms say: “Oh you don’t understand, my son or daughter wants to sit and do schoolwork for hours and hours.”  I will talk about that in just a minute.

Whatever label the public school wants to give advanced learners, which I never worried about much, I knew the subjects I did and did not do in kindergarten had a positive affect on his development.

Essential Subjects to Cover When Homeschooling Kindergarten

Like I mentioned before, some of my experience was based on failures or what did not work because it was unbalanced.

However, many things and subjects I covered did work.

I have divided homeschooling kindergarten subjects or activities into two groups.

One group, which is vital and the other group, which if you can find the energy to possibly do, adds enrichment to your kindergartner’s path and what is more creates the life long learner we all want.

New Homeschooler Online Self-Paced Boot Camp By Tina Robertson

Too, I have given an estimated amount of time to spend on that subject.

Before I give you estimates for the formal part of learning, one important point to remember is that kids this age are learning with every breath.

That is why playing outside, nature, and plenty of time for arts and crafts is part of a learning. They are just as important IF not more so depending on your child’s development for learning.

Subject

Time Covered

Phonics

20 minutes direct instructions which means 1:1 time each day.  Then an unlimited amount of time exploring the sounds through hands-on crafts and movements.

Penmanship

10 minutes with direct instruction which means 1:1 time each day and showing them how to form letters. Then an unlimited amount of time enforcing the shape of the letter and strengthening fine motor skills through play and movement.

Reading

30 minutes with direct instruction which means having them read to you mixed with a combination of you reading to them. Then an unlimited amount of time each day as they want to read to you, listen to audio books and yet still more reading aloud by you.

Math

30 minutes with direct instruction which means working with them 1:1 teaching them about the basic operations. Then an unlimited amount of time reading living math books, playing games about numbers and using interactive content like iPads along with hands-on manipulatives to learn math.

This next group of subjects is inextricably linked to a kindergartner’s development and like I mentioned play a valuable part in stimulating the intellectual growth of my sons.

  • Art, music, and gymnastics.

Art stimulated imagination and fed their creativity.

Music played an important in stimulating math and science thinking skills and gymnastics helped to strengthen their motor skills for both large gross skills and fine motor skills.

Learning Through Play – Vital to Kindergarten.
It’s called Developmentally Appropriate

My reason for dividing out the groups in this manner is because when you are overwhelmed taking care of so many littles, you need the assurance that if you just do the vital subjects that your kindergartner will still have a huge head start.

I am sure you noticed by now that the actual direct part of teaching kindergarten only takes about 1 1/2 hours.  Yes, that is it!

This is the only formal part of teaching that is needed. 

Learning at this age is intertwined with playing as it such be.

I almost made the mistake of allowing Mr. Senior 2013 to do workbook after workbooks for hours because he wanted to until I realized that by second grade I almost had a homeschool burnout.

All About Reading Pre-reading

When children are high achievers, gifted or just enjoy learning, think of long term hands-on projects or activities that can be expanded to feed their almost tireless need to learn.

Guide them to expand that learning not only takes place with seat work, but that is it more hands-on than seat down.

Look at some wonderful, detailed tips for teaching young kids:

  • What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them? Part 1 of 3
  • Teaching Handwriting When Homeschooling the Early Years Part 3 
  • Teaching Homeschooled Boys How to Read – When to Panic!
  • What You’ve Got To Know About Teaching Reading Comprehension
  • Awesome Reading Aloud Tracking Time Homeschool Form
  • 5 Easy Steps to Putting Together Your Own Homeschool Phonics Program
  • Homeschool Organization – Preschool/Kindergarten Free Morning Routine Flip Cards
  • How To Get Your First Homeschooled Child Reading
  • How Early Should I Begin Homeschooling My First Child? (and checklist)
  • How to Know What A Homeschooled Child Should Learn Yearly?
  • Help! I Can’t Teach My Homeschooled Child How to Read – 5 Step Checklist
  • 35 Simple But Powerful American History Homeschool Resources K to 12
  • The BEST Resources for Teaching Art at Home (K to Gray)

I have never heard an older child reflecting back say that he or she did too many crafts or interactive activities during their kindergarten years, but I have heard many who wish their moms had done more fun things and crafts.

They only have ONE year to be a kindergartner, make it memorable for the right reasons and they will remember and better yet grow up to be well-rounded high achieving homeschoolers.

How many subjects are you covering in kindergarten? Do you need some help? Post them here and I don’t mind a bit looking them over.

Do you want to see some of what I used in kindergarten?

I look fondly at these products like Dr. Maggie’s Phonics readers because this set was my very first set and Alpha Omega Horizons phonics challenged us.

Also, be sure to look at my Amazon Store where I have subjects organized for you on things I’ve used through the years.

Homeschooling Kindergarten: What Subjects to Teach and For How Long?

Hugs and love ya,

Homeschool Kindergarten. What Subjects to Teach and For How Long @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

29 CommentsFiled Under: Schedule/Balance Home & School, Teach/Which Subjects to Teach/Cover EVERYTHING Tagged With: homeschoolreading, kindergarten, new homeschooler

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Footer

Privacy Policy | About Me | Reviews | Contact | Advertise

Categories

Archives

Tina Robertson is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

Copyright © 2025 · 5 TNT LLC · Log in · Privacy Policy