

Homeschool Planning: Simplifying the Schedule
August 6, 2025

Hey, Mama! Welcome to The Homeschool Minute. Planning your homeschool schedule doesn’t have to be overwhelming. Keeping it simple allows for flexibility and helps you focus on what matters most. Pro-tip: Set aside at least two days per month for field trips or play days in their entirety. Remember, Proverbs 16:9 (KJV) reminds us, “A man’s heart deviseth his way: but the LORD directeth his steps.” Trust Him to guide your planning, and take it one step at a time. You’ve got this!
Sherri Seligson
Planning for the Important Things in Your Homeschool
Todd Wilson
Keep It Simple, Susan (My grandkids won’t let me say stupid)
Beth Mora
What Kind of Music Does Your Schedule Play?
Hal and Melanie Young
Your Own Plan

Sherri Seligson
Planning for the Important Things in Your Homeschool
Planning? Is that even a thing when our kids’ needs are changing monthly? And that’s not counting sickness, potty training, meal prep, and outside activities that make each day a unique one. How can we even plan?
Well, the principle of planning is a Biblical one. The Lord desires us to plan our days and watch as He uses those plans to show us His good works.
One thing that I learned early on when my four kids were young is that if we don’t plan, then the urgent things take over our lives (too many co-op classes, field trips, and/or athletics, etc.). That means we can sometimes miss the important, but not urgent things. What are those? Things such as building relationships with your children, giving them time to be creative, exploring the outdoors, and learning who God is and how He loves them.
However, it is good to start from a plan and hold your hands open to whatever God has for you. At the beginning of the school year, prayerfully consider what spiritual and academic goals you would like to build and encourage in each of your children. These should line up with the important things in your days—the things that are both urgent and not urgent. It will remind you that these are what you don’t let slide if time becomes tight.
And did you know that teachers in public and private schools have teacher planning days throughout the school year? I say that homeschoolers should have those, too! Times when we can review our yearly goals and determine if we need to make any adjustments or recapture lost momentum. By pulling back and reviewing what you’ve done so far, you’ll often be encouraged to see how much progress you’ve actually made! Perhaps each quarter of the school year, team up with another homeschool family. You watch their kids, say, one Friday while they have a planning day, and then they watch your kids the following Friday for you.
Revisiting the big goals for each child during the year helps give you clarity, encouragement, and peace in your homeschool plans!
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About the author
Sherri Seligson, M.Ed. is a 21-year veteran homeschool mom, marine biologist and author of Apologia’s science courses, instructional videos, and more. Sherri loves encouraging moms and teaching families the wonders of God’s creation. www.sherriseligson.com; Facebook: SherriSeligsonAuthor; Instagram: sherriseligson

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Todd Wilson
Keep It Simple, Susan (My grandkids won’t let me say stupid)
OK, we’ve been together long enough for you to know that I’m not going to offer any kind of planning advice. I don’t do planners, plans, or organization. So, about the only advice I can add to the topic of keeping it simple is to keep it simple . . . today.
For most of you, your life is anything but simple. If there was a homeschool reality show equivalent to Hoarders, you’d all be the stars. Somehow, you’ve managed to fill your day to the brim with all kinds of stuff.
I’m thinking that a total keep-it-simple makeover might be a little daunting, so how about a keep-it-simple-today makeover?
Start by making a mental list of all the things you’ve got going today (include school subjects, co-ops/meetings, doctor appointments, playing games with your children, reading aloud together, laughing together, snuggling with your husband after the kids are in bed . . . anything else you can think of).
Now, don’t do anything on the list that doesn’t really matter. So . . . you might need to cancel that appointment, skip math for your child who is already ahead, read a book that isn’t on the list just for fun, bake cookies just because, or watch a video in the middle of the day.
Need help in knowing what matters today? If you think about doing it and you sigh deeply because you dread the thought of it, then it doesn’t really matter. If you think about doing it and smile, then that matters.
Just for today.
That sounds simple.
be real,
Todd
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