THERE ARE NO TYPICAL DAYS IN HOMESCHOOLING. EVER.
And, that's okay!
I've also learned that even though there are no typical days, having a loosely knit schedule is just what our family has always needed. Though I highly doubt I will ever have a week that looks exactly like what I have outlined below, our "schedule", if you can call it that, has been the key factor in keeping my sanity over the last few weeks. Another key factor: remembering to be flexible, and remembering that if things don't go as planned, its perfectly okay!
Sunday is the first day of the week for us. It's basically reserved for church and family. At least we try to keep it that way. It's typically the one day of the week Mr. B doesn't work and gets to sleep in, well, if you call 6:30 sleeping in anyways. Sunday night starts our weeknight routine of baths, books, and early bedtime. The goal is to have both kids in their rooms with books read and snuggled up in their beds by 7:30. Our reasoning for this isn't so much that we want them asleep that early, but rather that we believe that to have a strong family, you have to have a strong marriage, and to have a strong marriage, its imperative that you get quality time with your spouse. The kids are free to read or quietly watch a movie, and typically have fallen asleep by the time Mr. B and I hit the sheets.
Weekdays start out early at our house. Mr. B and I wake up at 4:30, and while he is getting ready for work I pack his lunch and prepare his breakfast. He is typically out the door by 5:15, and I start my day after that.
I try to stay out of bed, and most mornings I succeed. I won't lie and say I do every morning though. Some nights just aren't long enough and I can't keep my eyes open. But most mornings, I make a pot of coffee and settle in for my Bible study and prayer time. By 6 I've finished my morning study, and move on to my "To-Do" folder, which includes things like bills, work I do for our church, lesson planning, meal planning, and the like. I work on it until about 6:30 and then try to squeeze in a morning workout before getting showered, dressed and ready for the day. At 7:30, it's time to wake up the kids and they make their beds.
While they are washing up and getting dressed for the day, I start breakfast and throw in a load of laundry. (I've recently became a Flybaby, read all about the Flylady here.) By 8 we have started eating breakfast and doing our morning devotional. After breakfast, we all clean up together and I wash dishes and shine my sink while they wash up and pull their workboxes into our dining room for the day.
At 8:30 we start school. And that's when any sense of time goes out the window. There are too many variables in learning styles, what's interesting and exciting for the day, and so forth, so instead, we do things in a specific order and take a break for lunch, cleanup and switching laundry over around noon. Monday's schooling starts at 8:30 and lasts till 9, when we have to leave for my weekly meeting at church. We are home by noon, eat lunch and resume with school after that.
Mornings start out with calendar and weather review, the pledge, the ABC song, the Days of the Week Song, the Months of the Year song, the Today Is song, and our weekly memorized Bible verse, which goes along with what they are learning at our church's KidZone program. We then move on to our workboxes. (I'll post more on our workboxes on a later date.)
After our workboxes are completed, or just whenever we are ready for a break, we do one of our "enrichment" studies. These are PE, Nature Study, Home Ec, and Shop, for now.
With the exception of Shop, which is a study they do with daddy, we are always done with everything in time to get chores done and have some free play before preparing for dad to come home. During the kid's free time I get my daily cleaning and Zone cleaning (again, check out the Flylady for details) done and prep for dinner.
With the exception of Wednesday nights, when we head to church for cooking and Kidzone/Adult Bible Study, at 4:30, we start at one end of the house and work our way to the basement, picking up and doing surface cleaning as we go. (On Wednesdays our cleanup routine just starts earlier.) We fold and put away the laundry that was in the dryer and then I'm off to cook dinner while the kids go play some more, or, if they wish, help me cook.
On all days but Wednesday, Dad comes home to a (hopefully) clean house at 5, and unpacks and settles in. Dinner is on the table by 5:30. We do a family devotional over dinner and talk about the day's events. After dinner we clean up the kitchen and dining room as a family, I shine my sink, and we spend the evening doing whatever projects we each choose. After being with me all day, the kids typically choose to hang out with dad. A little before 7 (a little before 8 on Wednesdays) the kids start their bedtime routine, and Mr. B and I get our personal time together. We're generally in bed by 9:30.
Friday nights and Saturdays are pretty much open for us to get whatever work we need done in the yard accomplished or to do fun things like family outings or get togethers with friends. And then on Sunday, it starts all over again.
So there you have it! Our typical week. If it sounds exhausting, it can be. But it is filled with fun, excitement, and makes for an organized, less stressful week for our family. Our house stays clean, we have healthy meals on the table, and we all get along - for the most part!
Check back later this week for my post on how we do workboxes.
Sunday is the first day of the week for us. It's basically reserved for church and family. At least we try to keep it that way. It's typically the one day of the week Mr. B doesn't work and gets to sleep in, well, if you call 6:30 sleeping in anyways. Sunday night starts our weeknight routine of baths, books, and early bedtime. The goal is to have both kids in their rooms with books read and snuggled up in their beds by 7:30. Our reasoning for this isn't so much that we want them asleep that early, but rather that we believe that to have a strong family, you have to have a strong marriage, and to have a strong marriage, its imperative that you get quality time with your spouse. The kids are free to read or quietly watch a movie, and typically have fallen asleep by the time Mr. B and I hit the sheets.
Weekdays start out early at our house. Mr. B and I wake up at 4:30, and while he is getting ready for work I pack his lunch and prepare his breakfast. He is typically out the door by 5:15, and I start my day after that.
I try to stay out of bed, and most mornings I succeed. I won't lie and say I do every morning though. Some nights just aren't long enough and I can't keep my eyes open. But most mornings, I make a pot of coffee and settle in for my Bible study and prayer time. By 6 I've finished my morning study, and move on to my "To-Do" folder, which includes things like bills, work I do for our church, lesson planning, meal planning, and the like. I work on it until about 6:30 and then try to squeeze in a morning workout before getting showered, dressed and ready for the day. At 7:30, it's time to wake up the kids and they make their beds.
While they are washing up and getting dressed for the day, I start breakfast and throw in a load of laundry. (I've recently became a Flybaby, read all about the Flylady here.) By 8 we have started eating breakfast and doing our morning devotional. After breakfast, we all clean up together and I wash dishes and shine my sink while they wash up and pull their workboxes into our dining room for the day.
At 8:30 we start school. And that's when any sense of time goes out the window. There are too many variables in learning styles, what's interesting and exciting for the day, and so forth, so instead, we do things in a specific order and take a break for lunch, cleanup and switching laundry over around noon. Monday's schooling starts at 8:30 and lasts till 9, when we have to leave for my weekly meeting at church. We are home by noon, eat lunch and resume with school after that.
Mornings start out with calendar and weather review, the pledge, the ABC song, the Days of the Week Song, the Months of the Year song, the Today Is song, and our weekly memorized Bible verse, which goes along with what they are learning at our church's KidZone program. We then move on to our workboxes. (I'll post more on our workboxes on a later date.)
After our workboxes are completed, or just whenever we are ready for a break, we do one of our "enrichment" studies. These are PE, Nature Study, Home Ec, and Shop, for now.
With the exception of Shop, which is a study they do with daddy, we are always done with everything in time to get chores done and have some free play before preparing for dad to come home. During the kid's free time I get my daily cleaning and Zone cleaning (again, check out the Flylady for details) done and prep for dinner.
With the exception of Wednesday nights, when we head to church for cooking and Kidzone/Adult Bible Study, at 4:30, we start at one end of the house and work our way to the basement, picking up and doing surface cleaning as we go. (On Wednesdays our cleanup routine just starts earlier.) We fold and put away the laundry that was in the dryer and then I'm off to cook dinner while the kids go play some more, or, if they wish, help me cook.
On all days but Wednesday, Dad comes home to a (hopefully) clean house at 5, and unpacks and settles in. Dinner is on the table by 5:30. We do a family devotional over dinner and talk about the day's events. After dinner we clean up the kitchen and dining room as a family, I shine my sink, and we spend the evening doing whatever projects we each choose. After being with me all day, the kids typically choose to hang out with dad. A little before 7 (a little before 8 on Wednesdays) the kids start their bedtime routine, and Mr. B and I get our personal time together. We're generally in bed by 9:30.
Friday nights and Saturdays are pretty much open for us to get whatever work we need done in the yard accomplished or to do fun things like family outings or get togethers with friends. And then on Sunday, it starts all over again.
So there you have it! Our typical week. If it sounds exhausting, it can be. But it is filled with fun, excitement, and makes for an organized, less stressful week for our family. Our house stays clean, we have healthy meals on the table, and we all get along - for the most part!
Check back later this week for my post on how we do workboxes.
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