Not Back to School Blog Hop - A Day in the Life
This week at Heart of the Matter Online is the last week in the Not Back To School Blog Hop. The theme is A Day in The Life. I haven't quite figured out what a "typical" day looks like yet, but we documented our day today and would like to share it with you.
7:30 a.m. - If the kids aren't up, I wake them up at this time. They both have to make their beds and get dressed, then head downstairs for breakfast. We do our devotions at the breakfast table.
After breakfast comes chores. I got this chore chart idea from Kris at Weird, Unsocialized Homeschoolers. It works very well in our house. I load up the "to do" pockets the night before and those are the chores for the day. Once their chores are completed, they put them in the "done" pocket.
Miss B's chore today was gathering the towels in the house and getting them in the wash. G Man's chore was to check all bathrooms and restock with toilet paper. This sounds like a little job, but it really comes in handy (especially when you are the only one home and are in the downstairs bathroom and need toilet paper!)
My son's crate is similar to this, but he doesn't have a checklist for his Kindergarten work. I am thinking, however, that I might institute that with him in the very near future! Each of the children does math, grammar/language arts, handwriting, history, spelling, and reading in the morning. My daughter also has to practice piano and complete her Bible study. Of course my kindergartner gets a lot of my attention, but after about an hour of intensive work with me he can then read, work on lapbook pieces independently, play with puzzles, manipulatives, etc... or have computer time.
11:00-12:30 - We finish up any work that wasn't done in the first morning block. Today I spent that time giving my daughter a spelling test, working on handwriting with my son, and playing a fun chain review game (more to come on that in a later post!) about the US Constitution.
12:30-1:30 Lunch and read-aloud time. Most often we do our science reading or library book reading during this time. Today we started our study of the human body so we read The Magic School Bus Inside The Human Body.
1:30-2:30 - quiet time for my son (he generally falls asleep - he still needs about an hour nap each day) and my daughter reads quietly in her room or we finish up any read-alouds that are specific to her curriculum. If we have planned ahead and our work is completed, sometimes we go the library or to play with friends during this time - today we went swimming with a new homeschooling friend and it was lots of fun!
Our afternoons and evenings are usually filled with ball practice, tennis lessons, piano lessons and church activities. I also give private piano lessons two afternoons a week, so the schedule gets tricky. I'm also hoping that Fridays will be our day for field trips or big art activities.
This schedule is by no means a hard and fast rule. I'm learning that FLEXIBILITY is the key to happiness when homeschooling. Tomorrow I know we will spend lots of time in the morning on learning about the human body, because the kids were so interested in it today. My kids will also be part of a local Christian homeschool group each Thursday afternoon. When good opportunities arise I like to be able to juggle things around to take advantage of them.
So, back to the end of our day:
8:30-9:00 - We try to have the kids in bed by this time. My husband and I do a read-alouds each child at bedtime. This is one of my favorite times of the day.
10:00 - dad goes to bed (he gets up at 4:15 a.m. to hit the gym - yikes)
11:00 (or later) - mom goes to bed - I have to blog and catch up on a couple of shows I like, you know!
That's our day in a nutshell - I can't wait to get to some other blogs and see what a typical day is in their homeschool!
Reader Comments (5)
Mary, Thanks for stopping by my blog. I love your chore chart. I have tried many times to be more formal with chores. Every system I have tried has failed. But with your system, you could just pick one thing a day and that would really add up as the week goes on.
I am definitely going to try that in my house!
I love the chore chart-- very cool!!
Sounds like a great routine!
Your kids are super cute! Have an awesome year of homeschooling!
I see math wrap-up's in the workbox there ;-) Those are on my wish list for this year...how are they working for you? Love the chore idea also. Have a great school year!
Hi!
Enjoying your blog for the first time today after seeing you linked up on Hip Homeschool Hop. Enjoyed reading your daily schedule very much. Particularly liked the chore helper's chart! Hadn't seen that idea anywhere and I appreciate you bringing it to us :) "Check toilet paper"? Sounds like something we should implement in our home . Best wishes! Marie-Claire