Preschool and Kindergarten Homeschool Resources

Please be aware that there is an overwhelming deluge of evidence that academic work done too early is detrimental to young kids and that being read to A LOT, exploring nature, unstructured play time, very limited screen time, and just living life within a family is the perfect environment for mental growth.

You don’t actually NEED a curriculum at these ages, but you are likely not feeling confident enough in yourself to go without one, so here are some suggestions to help guide you. (Don’t forget to check Amazon, YouTube, and Google for reviews!)….

A Year of Playing Skillfully

Simply Charlotte Mason

Wildwood Curriculum (secular)

Exploring Nature With Children

The Peaceful Preschool

Gentle + Classical

Charlotte Mason Your Way

 

MATH

Miquon Math (PreK-3) – Miquon is what we used in the lower grades, and I have not found a better way to instill intuitive number sense than this program. This would be my #1 choice for K-1st.

Education Unboxed – Education Unboxed is a website (the one you’re on right now!) with videos that we made years ago to show how to teach/learn math with math blocks. Many people use this as their only math curriculum in the early years. Many schools are using these to train their teachers. If you used only these videos for math in PreK-1st, your child will have a better grasp of math concepts than almost every child who has only used pencil and paper. THIS WORKS. And it’s free except for the price of the blocks!

Singapore Essential Math A

Singapore Essential Math B

This is a great curriculum to help you feel like you’ve covered everything you “should” cover without it being too overwhelming. Inexpensive.

 

HANDWRITING

Handwriting Without Tears

Praised by Occupational Therapists as the best handwriting curriculum currently available. (I don’t like the style of the letters, but I have only heard good things about this curriculum for kids who struggle with writing.)

A Reason for Handwriting

Ball and stick printing. Traditional cursive. Christian (uses scripture for practice).

Getty-Dubay Italics

Italic style looks nice and makes it easier to transition to cursive.

 

PHONICS

Before you look below, please read this: If your child is giving you pushback, if she is just not making progress no matter what you do, if you are getting frustrated and annoyed… PUT IT ON HOLD. The brain must be developmentally ready to learn to read. You cannot make the brain develop faster than it’s going to (though you can provide a rich environment which allows it to grow more actual connections). Most kids will learn to read at 5-6. Some will learn at 3 and some will learn at 8 and there are a few outliers who will learn outside of those ages. If you have a child who is going to learn at 7, but you are pushing phonics instruction at 3, 4, 5, and 6, by the time he gets to 7 he’s going to be sick to death of “reading” and possibly think he is stupid. Instead of pushing phonics when the child isn’t ready, take a few months off before trying again, and instead READ READ READ READ READ to him. Every day. All kinds of books. Lots of poetry. Let him see you reading so he knows this is what people do. He WILL learn to read! Your biggest job is to make sure he develops and doesn’t lose a love of reading.

Teaching Reading With BOB Books – Easy. Fairly inexpensive if you use the online version (online is for you, not your child) and make your own cards. Takes some initial work to get everything set up at the beginning but open and go after that. Not visually overwhelming. Simple.

The Ordinary Parents’ Guide to Teaching Reading – We used this. Scripted (which I ignored because it felt too stilted). Inexpensive. It was great as a guide for what order to teach the various phonics pieces.

Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons – One of the longest used programs around. Uses non-standard orthography (formation of letters to represent various sounds). Take a look inside before deciding on this. Many people swear by this program.

Teach Your Monster to Read – Free app that people are finding success with.

Starfall – We used this successfully! Online (maybe there is an app, too?) videos that teach basic phonics.

Leapfrog Letter Factory – This is an easy way to teach letter sounds and beginning phonics!!

 

READ ALOUD LISTS

1000 Good Books List

Ambleside Online Year 0 Books

Read Aloud Revival Picture Books List

Charlotte Mason Plenary Preschool Books List

Charlotte Mason Plenary Kindergarten Books List

 

MISCELLANEOUS

Here’s a list of what to expect from a Kindergartener. You could literally just do the things on this list and not buy curriculum if you wanted to – What to Expect From a Kindergartener Kindergarten Program and Books

Developing the Early Learner workbooks – If your child struggles with auditory or visual processing, these may be helpful. We found that only books 1 and 3 or 2 and 4 were necessary.

Book 1Book 2Book 3Book 4

Come Look With Me art books – Excellent beginning art appreciation books!

Winnie-the-Pooh and The House at Pooh Corner, When We Were Very Young and Now We Are Six – PLEASE don’t graduate your child from kindergarten without having read these aloud or at least listened to the audio books together! Milne was a genius. His poetry books are amazing, too!

Poems to Read to the Very Young – One of my favorite early poetry books. We also loved A Child’s Garden of Verses, The Llama Who Had No Pajama, Runny Babbit, Mother Goose, and The National Geographic Book of Animal Poetry (gorgeous!).

The Aesop for Children – This book is on every single Charlotte Mason and Classical homeschooling list. Don’t miss it!

Pattern Blocks and Cards – One of our most used educational toys.

Jeweler’s Loops – Great for looking at tiny things in nature.

Go Find It game – Fun way to get kids (and adults!) exploring outdoors.

Peter and the Wolf – Introduction to the orchestra. This is the version my husband watched as a boy. We got an audio CD from the library when our girls were young. There are many versions! Here’s a ballet version. And here’s a live orchestra performance.

Carnival of the Animals

The Cat’s Duet (bad video quality but cute!)

 

And, lastly, some great articles to help you keep your priorities in order

Six Ways to Early Years You Won’t Regret

My Ideal Early Learning Program

Laundry Preschool

Early Years Math By the Way

Live Online Homeschool Classes

If you are willing to pay, there are classes your child can take where they meet live with a teacher and classmates once or twice per week and then are given homework for the other days. These are usually for junior and senior high but more and more schools are offering elementary classes! We did this a couple years ago for a Lord of the Rings class and last year for Renaissance Literature and Chemistry. This year we will be adding in a Latin class. I do not have experience with all the schools below. This is just a curated list from what I’ve seen mentioned elsewhere. You’ll have to do your own research about each one!

One thing to note: If your student is in high school and wants to return to high school next year instead of graduating through homeschool, check with your school district to see if their classes this year need to be accredited. Otherwise, don’t worry about accreditation! They can jump back into school without it. Here is an article on the topic.

Some schools to consider:
Dreaming Spires Home Learning
Schole Academy
The House of Humane Letters
Center for Lit
Well Trained Mind Academy
The Potters School
Wasko Lit
Veritas Press
Big River Academy
Open Tent Academy
HSLDA Academy
Outschool
Mr. D Math
FundaFunda Academy
True North Homeschool Academy
Excelsior
Heritage Online Courses
Leadership Education Academy
Bravewriter
Home to Teach
Hazelton Academy
Wisdom Homeschooling (Canada)
Aim Academy
Williamsburg Classical Academy
Homeschool Spanish Academy
The Thinking Kid

Homeschool Language Arts Resources

Language Lessons for Today (2-6) – We used a slightly less updated version of these books. They include copywork, dictation, narration, composition, grammar, poetry study, and art study. Only around 100 lessons per year which means you can do it 3 days per week. The other 2 days could be used for copywork/dictation, a spelling program, or written narration from other school books.

The Good and the Beautiful (K-8) – All inclusive language arts, plus art appreciation and geography. Levels K-5 are free if you are willing to use PDFs. Visually appealing. My one caveat is that it has a very moralistic tone. I couldn’t get past that, but, if you don’t think it will bother you, this may be an excellent choice! This is a popular option.

Writing & Rhetoric (3-9+) – This program mixes the best of Classical, Charlotte Mason, and Modern writing instruction. Great program! You may want to add a spelling and/or grammar program to this.

Copywork, Dictation, and Narration (Oral and Written): completely free

This is the primary method we have used. It is not for the faint of heart since there is no curriculum telling you what to do! It requires that you use high quality books (not textbooks, usually) so that you are copying, dictating, and narrating from the very best mankind has to offer. Any Charlotte Mason program will give you a good book list.

If this approach interests you, read more about it here. Or search the terms on your podcast app (probably with the name Charlotte Mason).

 

SPELLING RESOURCES

All About Spelling (for struggling spellers)

Spelling Power (for natural spellers or older children)

Or you could just have them study words they misspell in their writing! Periodically review to make sure they still know them.

 

GRAMMAR RESOURCES (if not included in your Language Arts program, though keep in mind that schools aren’t really teaching much grammar anymore)

Grammarland audio and worksheets – This is an old book written in the late 1800s. My kids enjoyed listening to it! Completely free.

Beowulf’s Grammar – I haven’t used this, but it looks fun for a kid who likes to cut and paste, etc.

MCT Island Level – This is what we used and enjoyed. Publisher says it’s for gifted 3rd graders or average 4th graders, but it covers everything that was covered in my advanced 7th grade English class (minus the diagramming). This is a sit-on-the-couch-and-read-together curriculum. Goofy. Thorough. After you’ve read through the books, you practice one grammar sentence 1-2 times per week for the rest of the year. All you need are Grammar Island TM, Sentence Island TM, and Practice Island TM (and student book if you don’t want to write out the sentences for your child – or we sometimes just did them orally, covering up the answers). Some people use this with their whole family during “Morning Time.”

Junior Analytical Grammar and Analytical Grammar – I am using this for my 7th grader this year. Thorough. Workbook format. Diagramming included. Video teaching if you need it. Here’s a review.

MadLibs – If you just want them to learn the parts of speech, this is a painless and inexpensive way to do that!