Does your homeschool day need a better start? Wondering how to homeschool multiple ages with less stress? You need a morning time routine.
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Homeschool Morning Time Routine
What is a homeschool morning time and should you use it?
When should you do morning time?
Morning time floats around the homeschool world with words like morning basket or couch subjects. In short, this is the portion of the homeschool day where you can teach multiple subjects and topics to all different ages. This is a great way to enjoy family time while also simplifying your homeschool schedule!
While it’s called morning time, it doesn’t have to necessarily be done in the morning. Just connect it to any of your normal events that happen everyday, like lunch, for example. Some families may find it easier to include this routine in the middle of the day when you’re all gathered for lunch.
It really doesn’t matter when you do it, but including some dedicated family-style subjects during your day at some point is the key.
What do you do during morning time?
Morning time provides a great way to teach almost every subject together with a ride range of ages, especially from K-8. We’ll cover specific ideas for teen morning time below in our conversation with Gena Mayo, creator of Morning Time Teens.
But especially if you have several children within the K-8 range, you can do almost every subject together except those skill-level specific content areas like math and language arts.
Consider doing your history and science readings, nature study, art, music appreciation and composer study, Bible, foreign language, memorization, poetry, and literature read-aloud.
The clear benefit, aside from being together as a family, is that in just an hour or two together, you can cover almost everything that needs done in your day. Then, your kids can head to the table for the individual subjects while you help them as needed.
Morning Basket Ideas
While you don’t have to use a basket at all, it does help to corral lots of resources and materials and keep them in one place until you need them.
Here are just a few ideas for what you could include in your morning basket:
- songs
- poems
- flashcards
- timeline review
- history read-aloud
- science living book
- nature journals
- current events activity
- Bible study
- prayer journal
- notebooking materials
- biography
- audiobook
- character study
- calendar and weather time (if you have really young kids)
- picture books
- seasonal items (like an Advent study)
Why a Morning Basket Works – listen to episode 40
Do you need your homeschool day to start off better? Are you struggling to get everyone motivated in the morning? Maybe you should try a morning basket!
The Benefits of a Morning Basket
There are almost no negatives to a morning basket! But the benefits are enormous. If you’re overwhelmed with your current homeschool plan, then adding in a morning basket routine will help to simplify your day and increase productivity.
- Gets the whole family started off together
- Lets you include multiple subjects that might normally be forgotten
- Works really well to teach multiple ages together
- Informal structure
- Can change it out – it doesn’t have to stay the same all year
What We’ve Used in Our Morning Basket
The contents of our morning basket have changed from year to year, but here are a few specific resources we used.
- A Peek Inside Our Bible Memory Box
- How to Include a Foreign Language In Your Homeschool – Even If You Aren’t Fluent!
- Checklist – How to Teach Your Kids a Language, Even If You’re Not Fluent
- FREE video series – How to Teach Your Kids a Second Language at Home
- FREE 7-day trial of the Cultured Home Language Program
- Classical Conversations Timeline Cards
- Classical Conversations Science Cards
- The Story of the Orchestra
How to use Morning Time Teens – listen to episode 173
What about your teens? Can a morning time work for them too? Gena Mayo thinks so! She’s the veteran homeschool mom behind I Choose Joy and Music in Our Homeschool. And now she’s launching her new Morning Time Teen plan for homeschool families to use with their older kids.
Listen in on episode 173 of the Homeschool with Moxie Podcast as we learn about how Gena uses morning time, how it’s looked through the years, and what’s included in her new Morning Time Teens.
See what’s included in Morning Time Teens: A Year with Lewis and Tolkien – Gena says you can use this for a literature credit on your high schooler’s transcript! But there’s a lot of flexibility with this plan if you don’t want to use all of the ideas.
Take a look at the first two weeks of Morning Time Teens: A Year with Lewis and Tolkien
Enroll in Morning Time Teens: A Year with Lewis and Tolkien
Additional Homeschool Schedule and Planning Resources
Has homeschool planning left you feeling overwhelmed? We can help! Check out these links and resources.
Ultimate Guide to Kindergarten Homeschool Curriculum
How to Homeschool Your Elementary Child
How to Homeschool Multiple Ages without Losing Your Mind
Can I Really Homeschool High School? << includes lots of free high school-related resources
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