Let’s be honest for a second: homeschooling multiple kids can make your brain feel like scrambled eggs. Different ages, different levels, different attitudes… all happening while you’re trying to drink that one cup of coffee you’ve reheated three times.
But it can be done. And it doesn’t have to make you lose your mind. Here’s what we’ve learned after plenty of trial, error, and “well… that didn’t work” moments.
Teach Together Whenever You Can
Many families use the “one-room schoolhouse” style, and honestly, it worked great for us at first. Everyone doing everything together? Yes, please. Until it didn’t.
Now, we combine as many subjects as possible, then split for the ones that require one-on-one attention.
Best Subjects for Group Learning
For us, it’s always been:
- History
- Geography
- Science
- Literature
These subjects are naturally group-friendly—and more fun when everyone’s involved. Some days we trace maps and read stories; other days, we pull out games. Games = learning without the whining.
Favorite learning games & activities:
- Race Across the USA — geography + random facts
- Trekking Through History — build your own timeline
- Science at home — Who Knows Science Better?, Bill Nye, Magic School Bus, Disney+ documentaries
- Science outside the house — the boys go to a STEAM co-op (huge sanity saver for me!)
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Save One-on-One Time for Subjects That Actually Need It
Some subjects just don’t work well in a group:
Math

Everyone’s at a different level. Honestly? I also separate it for emotional reasons. Homeschoolers have self-esteem issues too, and it can sting when your little brother is right behind you in math.
So I sit with each kid individually. It’s quieter, calmer, and tears are avoided.
Reading & Spelling
My oldest has APD (auditory processing disorder), so noise is a big distraction. Quiet one-on-one time is non-negotiable.
When we can make reading or spelling fun together, we go for games like:
- Hangman
- Fishing for words
- Whiteboard spelling races
Easy, low-pressure, and still counts as school.
Use a Simple Rotation System (Game-Changer!)
Instead of trying to be everywhere at once, we rotate:
- One kid on online work
- One kid working with me
- Younger ones doing sensory bins or busy baskets
Nothing fancy—just a basic rotation that keeps the day from spiraling into chaos (well… less chaos).
Routine vs. Strict Schedule (Kindness Wins)
Some families love strict schedules. Exact times for every subject. If that works for you, amazing!
For us? Routines work better. They feel lighter, more natural, and way less stressful. Strict schedules always fell apart for us—every interruption threw everything off, and my OCD brain? Not okay.
Curious about the difference between a schedule and a routine? I broke it down clearly here: Read my post on How to Create a Homeschool Routine that Actually Works
How I Build Our Routine
Start with non-negotiables:
- Tuesday therapy at 11
- Tuesday Ninja Warrior training 4–7
- Thursday STEAM co-op 9–3
- Friday Board Game Play 11–1 at Cardboard Castle Games
Then plug in homeschool time around those.
The boys know: if you want your one hour of video games by 3:00, schoolwork needs to be done. That’s as structured as we get.
My Checklist System (Simple but Magical)
Each kid gets a daily checklist:
- Independent work
- One-on-one subjects
- Combined subjects
- Any chores or life skills for the day
- Free-time options once boxes are checked
They choose the order (within reason). The result? Less complaining, fewer “what do I do now?” questions… more peace for everyone.
Keeping Kids Busy During Independent Work
Rule: “Downstairs or outside — no in-between.”
Options vary by age:
- Busy baskets
- Lego
- Sensory bins
- Bikes outside
- Personal interests
- Audiobooks
- Naptime for littles
Call it PE, free time, or exploration—whatever works.
What Happens When One Kid Finishes Early?
This happens every day.
- Oldest: usually done first; picks drums, animations, reading, outdoor play, or whatever creative project fascinates him.
- Youngest: often next; bikes, magnet tiles, doodle board, or room play.
- Middle child: slower, needs body doubling. Often discouraged about finishing last, so we remind him:
- Everyone works differently
- It’s not a race
- He’d likely finish first on a hands-on project
Homeschooling lets us see each child’s strengths clearly.
Why Flexibility Wins Every Time
Homeschooling isn’t about filling time or checking boxes. It’s about forward movement.
- Some days your kids fly through work.
- Some days every subject feels like climbing a mountain in flip-flops.
- Some days you scrap the plan because life happens.
Flexibility:
- Keeps peace
- Reduces burnout
- Supports real learning
- Honors each child’s pace
- Makes your home feel like… home
A lot of homeschooling is trial and error. You’re not doing it wrong—you’re learning with your kids.
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