homeschooling

How to Protect Your Homeschool Family Online: Simple Tools That Actually Work

As in all my posts, there may be affiliate links. However, ClearPlay et. all did not sponsor or pay for this post in any way – I just love the services.

As parents, one of our main jobs is to protect our family. We protect our kids from germs and sickness to the best of our ability by cleaning the house, teaching them to wash their hands when they get home from being out and about, teaching them about hygiene, etc. We protect them from physical dangers by telling them not to touch the stove and showing them why, by telling them not to talk to strangers, etc.

Just the basics!

One often neglected place where we don’t remember to protect our kids to the best of our abilities is online.

Why Even Good Websites Aren’t Safe

I remember going on a popular homeschool blog to load our morning time plans when the kids were little. Unbeknownst to me, it had been hacked! There were *ahem* super bad images plastered there on the page! I quickly turned it to a different tab, glad that my kids didn’t see.

Even if we are going to decidedly Good Things online, we cannot be too careful. Decidedly joy-killing stuff when we should be filling our kids with joy.

Yet, there are simple steps you can take to protect your family from things and fortify your home.

As a Millennial parent, when computers and the internet were new, it all felt innocent and exciting. Napster let you record movie quotes to play on your Tracfone answering machine to give friends a laugh! MySpace let you post silly personality quizzes to see which ‘N Sync boy you “were,” and the like. The LOLCats came around and we all hadz cheezeburgerz. We tend to see the internet as something fun, irreverent, and silly, inhabited by friendly nerds. That feeling stuck with me, rubber stamping how I feel about the internet in general, and is hard to shake sometimes.

If I nerded you out and you don’t know what a Napster is, I’m sorry. Kind of!

Point being, as parents, we expect that if we teach our kids that Bad is Bad, that they will avoid it online. However, we are not counting on the fact that even if they are not actively seeking evil online, it is seeking them.

Router-Level Internet Filtering: The Protection You Actually Need

CleanBrowsing is one of the best tools out there! Many times, non-techie parents make the mistake of thinking they installed a browser extension to keep ads or junk off, so therefore they are protected. This is not the case.

Browser extensions are finicky at best and easy to remove, at worst. They get removed accidentally with updates. They turn themselves off when you need them. They don’t have the coverage you expect them to have. And, in addition, they are likely to steal your browsing data and sell it – not fun.

Plus, you forget which computers you added extension protection to… Or get a new gadget in the house and forget to sync it. Too complicated and too unreliable.

CleanBrowsing protects at the router level. For those of you who are not extreme Star Trek nerds, the internet comes into your house from an ISP (Internet Service Provider) like Suddenlink, Optimum, etc. to your modem. The modem connects to a router.

The router is like a sun that shoots sunrays of internet light to all your gadgets in the house.


CleanBrowsing acts like sunscreen, going into the router and making sure that all gadgets connected to the router get filtered even before that internet goes to your iPad, etc. It is easier to lockdown, control, monitor, and is much more simple to operate than juggling all those filters on separate gadgets.

For gadgets with data plans or hotspot capability, CleanBrowsing has an app that you can add directly to those devices to make sure they are covered with your plan on the go!

Before you worry about it, yes, they have a free plan! You can have a paid plan that is very reasonable in which you can customize things. I’ve customized blocks on various providers that like to make popup ads on our Roku, which is nice, but not super necessary.

Layering Your Family’s Online Protection

In addition to CleanBrowsing, we use Nighthawk Parental Controls on our router to control times and what gadgets are actually accessing our internet, as well as Google Family Link, for safe searching and app controls. Just for good measure, we also use Qustodio on some devices!

The main thing you should have is something like CleanBrowsing to protect not only from pornography (whether intentional or inadvertent in things like hacked sites, ads, etc.) but also just from junk hitting your computer.

The amount of random sites lagging onto your browsing would astound you. Cut those off!

Movie Filtering for Family Movie Night: VidAngel and ClearPlay

In addition to that, we use VidAngel and ClearPlay for movies. These two apps allow you to remove language, inappropriate scenes, violence, and such from movies. The cuts are at your discretion. Many times, you can’t even notice the cuts in the movies!

Some people feel that kids need to be exposed to bad language and violence in media so that they can be ready for Real Life as Adults.

I’m strongly opposed to this.

As an Adult in Real Life, I don’t go around hearing tons of cursing or having random acts of violence popping up in my path on a daily basis. Again, I don’t shop at Walmart! But… (Ok, that’s a joke…)

Besides, as adults, we cultivate the life we want to live. If your ideal life doesn’t have bad language in it, you are in charge of that. You can take steps to avoid it as much as possible.

“Go confidently in the direction of your dreams! Live the life you’ve imagined. As you simplify your life, the laws of the universe will be simpler.”
~Henry David Thoreau

If you want a simple life surrounded by daily Bible reading and Jesus-centric music, do it. Joy will follow.

Watching movies with cursing puts the words in your brain and makes you more readily apt to use them, either verbally or in your brain. It also stunts your vocabulary and makes you sound less intelligent.

My husband and I routinely ClearPlay and VidAngel things we want to watch, even on our own. Yes, without the kids around!

Before you wonder, but why watch things that need to be censored at all – that is a fair point, but there are some amazing movies – I was a Theatre/Communication double major with English Literature and also took extensive film studies classes in grad. school, give me a break here – that are amazing art but don’t need a few extra scenes or words that are added on top for no reason.

Due to my background, I’m not talking about being Amish or prudish. I’m the first to tell you that I’d rather go without lots and lots of things then lose my Spotify plan! But, we can still control our environment in such a way as to cultivate joy in our Spirits.

Marvel movies are a great example. Iron Man is one of my favorite movies of all time and I wanted to show it to the kids. It teaches that caring about others and being self sacrificing (and being really good at science!) can help one to be a better person and beat the odds!

However, I didn’t need the random bad words and dancing bikini chicks there at the beginning, before Tony’s redemption, highlighting his bad boy-ness that he activates hero mode there near the middle of the movie. His snarkiness alone communicates that just fine without them!

And just like that, Boom, Bikini Chicks have Disappeared!

Classic films like ET have tons and tons of language – and insults that I don’t need my little parrots mimicking! You may not remember that, because if like me, you saw it on TV when they used to take these things out, but it is still an amazing movie without it. Same goes for Back to the Future.

Here is what it looks like to use Clearplay, for instance.

Here is the main screen that pops up.
Then you can go more closely into the different blocked areas and see what you want exactly to block.
Yes, it bleeps out words for you, the parent! Isn’t that nice of them?! I thought so…

And for some of us, there are films we saw when we were in high school or so, that we may want to share with a spouse that are brilliant – looking at you, Wes Anderson!! – but have way too many things that we don’t want in our brains anymore. Like millions of repeated bad words, which really don’t even make sense in the context of the sentences they are used in.

My mom once told me that using the same bad word over and over again just makes you sound like you don’t have the imagination to think up a new adjective or word to use. Like, if we replaced a bad word with the word “pink” to describe a pony.

Would you sound smart if you said, “That pink pink pink pinkin’ pinkerty pinkest pink pony!!!”

Right, you would not sound smart. Case in point!

At a certain point, those things become undesirable. I used to have a giant Ignore button in my brain that things wouldn’t register. That is bad! You want your conscience to care. You don’t want to dull your senses. Now, I feel a magnetic revulsion from anything too violent or with too much language.

When my kids were little and all we watched was Mr. Rogers, Wild Kratts, the Wiggles, and the Wonder Pets, my spirit got sensitized again and I don’t want it to go back to the way it was when I was completely fine and dandy with going to Air Force One at the movie theatre as a kid.

The way to do that is to watch what you yourself watch.

How to Use VidAngel and ClearPlay

Using VidAngel or ClearPlay is easy!

VidAngel has Psych (which isn’t too violent generally but does have lots of random words popping up!) while ClearPlay has Marvel and more Disney movies.

What we do is have them on a Chrome extension and then send them to our Roku via wireless connection. We don’t have a TV, only a projector, but it is even easier to do if you have a more simple set up. Sometimes for more special effects laden movies, we hook up the HDMI to a laptop since the RAM suffers with heavy CGI.

Protecting Your Family Is Simple

You don’t need to be a tech genius to keep your family safe online. Start with router-level filtering through CleanBrowsing, add movie filtering tools like VidAngel or ClearPlay, and layer on additional parental controls as needed for your family.

The internet doesn’t have to be a scary place.

With a few simple tools, you can create a joyful, protected digital environment where your kids can learn, explore, and grow without stumbling into things that steal their innocence.

If you’d like to create a specialized plan for your home’s internet and media or need help knowing where to start or how to set it up, set up a coaching session with me! I’d love to help you in any way I can.


Christmas, Holidays, homeschooling, joy, parenting, Schedules, travel

How to Restart Homeschool After Christmas Break (Or Any Break): 4 Proven Strategies That Actually Work

Links in any posts may be affiliate links.

We generally homeschool through the year (see this blog) in order to avoid the slog back up the hill of stopping and then starting again. We find it easier to ease up a bit at different times of the year rather than completely stopping and then starting again.

As strange as that sounds, it is actually easier to do! Like leaving a car engine on idle and running the radio on fun music rather than turning the whole car off and reigniting the engine!

One exception to this is Christmas! At least a week before Christmas, sometimes two, that’s just it… We have too many Christmas parties to go to, too many gifts to wrap (and the schoolroom has become Official Elf Headquarters and is off limits to kids, anyway!), and too many fun things to do! Not that school isn’t fun, but math stops being able to compute when everyone is excited for Santa to come. I see that eyebrow raise – Don’t judge me, lol. We use the idiom of Santa to mean anonymous Christmas giving and always give adults in the family stocking from Santa (meaning gifts from all the family with silly tags), too.

At any rate, there’s always a natural spot in the Christmas getting-ready-days that just calls us to a halt and that’s okay!

It’s Not Just About Christmas: Common Reasons for Homeschool Breaks

There may be another reason besides Christmas you’ve had to stop. Maybe another holiday, a vacation, illness, business travel that you had to bring the kids, or just a general slowdown of the machine that you need to get revvin’ again!

The reason doesn’t matter. What matters is that you took the break you needed, and now you’re wondering how to restart your homeschool routine without feeling like you’re starting from scratch or dragging everyone kicking and screaming back to the table.

Whether you’re restarting homeschool after Christmas, recovering from a family illness, returning from an extended vacation, or simply getting your homeschool momentum back after a busy season, these strategies will help you transition smoothly.

The Homeschool Restart Challenge: Why Getting Back to School Feels So Hard

Let’s talk about why restarting homeschool after a break feels so difficult. During your time off, everyone has:

  • Gotten used to a different rhythm and routine
  • Discovered new interests and hobbies
  • Enjoyed the freedom of unstructured time
  • Maybe stayed up later and slept in longer
  • Gotten accustomed to saying “not today” to structured learning

And you, dear homeschool parent, have probably enjoyed not having to have Teacher Mode activated “on” every single day. You’ve had time to read that book, finish those projects, or simply get things done around the house without thinking about lesson plans.

So when it’s time to restart, there’s a natural resistance – from everyone, including you! My goal here is to help getting started again to not only be more fun for your kids but less of a hassle for you, too!

4 Tried and True Ways to Get Homeschool Happening Again

No matter what the reason for your homeschool break, here are four tried and true ways to get Things Happening again!

1. Set a Day (And Let Your Kids Have Input on When to Start)

Ask your kids when they’d like to get started. I’ll bet they actually do want to start up again, mine always have, but may appreciate getting to give their input and also have a little warning on when to start. That can make things run more smoothly!

Don’t just spring it on them the night before. Give at least 3-4 days of mental preparation time. Mark it on the calendar together so everyone can mentally prepare and talk about what they’re looking forward to learning.

This gives everyone a chance to adjust their expectations and wind down any break activities. You might even let them choose which subject they’d like to start with or what time of day feels right to begin.

2. Do Something Fun First! Play IS Serious Learning

You as the parent aren’t necessarily super excited to explain math equations again after the break, either. You get it, too. How about mixing it up with a fun science kit that’s been hiding out in the closet for a few months?

“Play is often talked about as if it were a relief from serious learning. But for children, play is serious learning. Play is really the work of childhood.” -Fred Rogers

This quote from Mr. Rogers himself reminds us of something crucial: when we start homeschool after a break with something playful and hands-on, we’re not “wasting time” or “avoiding real work.” We’re actually engaging in the most natural and effective form of learning for children.

So don’t feel guilty about pulling out those fun science kits or art projects. You’re not procrastinating – you’re teaching! I promise! Starting with play-based learning helps ease everyone back into the homeschool mindset without the pressure and resistance that can come with jumping straight into worksheets and textbooks.

Here are some ideas for fun homeschool restart activities:

Square Bubble Kit – My kids loved making square bubbles! This naturally leads into discussions about surface tension, geometry, and why bubbles are typically round. It’s hands-on, visual, and gets everyone excited about science again without feeling like “school.”


Detective Science Kit – Who wouldn’t want to use a fingerprinting and detective kit for schooltime?! And,it is certainly full of powerful learning opportunities!

This can be added to a unit study of Sherlock stories! Depending on your kids’ ages, Jim Weiss has Sherlock stories for kids on Audible or CD that don’t have anything too scary! Combine the detective kit with the audiobook, and suddenly you have an integrated unit study covering science, literature, logic, and critical thinking – all through play and investigation.


Snap Circuits – Snap Circuit kits never disappoint! We have too many of these but they are all super fun. They’re perfect for visual and kinesthetic learners, and they make electricity and circuits tangible. Even older kids who think they’re “too old” for kits get pulled into building increasingly complex projects. They are as complex or as simple as you want them to be!


Crystal Growing Kits – We did the mermaid kit instead of this hedgehog one but really need one… Magic mermaid crystals in rainbow colors? Yes, please! The patience required to watch crystals grow also teaches delayed gratification and scientific observation skills – serious learning disguised as magical fun.


Other fun first-day-back ideas that embrace playful learning:

  • Start a new read-aloud book that you’ve been intending to start
  • Take a nature walk and start a nature journal
  • Do an art project together using new supplies
  • Watch an educational documentary with popcorn
  • Have a family game day with strategy games
  • Build something together – Legos, Magna-Tiles, or cardboard creations

The goal is to remind everyone that learning is inherently interesting and enjoyable.

Once you’ve rekindled that spark through play and hands-on exploration, transitioning back to regular subjects feels less like a chore and more like a natural continuation of that curiosity.

3. Ease Into It (You Don’t Need to Do Everything on Day One)

Don’t think you have to do every subject with every kid on the day you’ve decided is Back to School Day. Only two subjects but back in the ring again? I’d call that a win!

Here’s your permission slip: You don’t have to do every subject with every kid on your first day back to homeschool.

Seriously. Give yourself grace here when restarting your homeschool routine.

What easing back into homeschool might look like:

  • Day 1: Just do math and reading – that’s it!
  • Day 2: Add in one more subject, maybe science.
  • Day 3: Add another subject like history.
  • Day 4: Include writing or language arts.
  • By Day 5: Tada! You’re back to your full homeschool schedule!

Consider starting with favorite subjects first. If your youngest loves science but dreads grammar, start the week with the thing he or she loves. Build positive momentum and enthusiasm before tackling the harder subjects that require more mental energy.

Shorter lessons are perfectly okay too. Maybe you typically do 45-minute homeschool lessons. For the first week back after your break, try 20-30 minutes. Quality over quantity, especially when you’re rebuilding homeschool habits and routines. It’s okay to start slow and get back into the groove.

You are the ruler of this homeschool planet that you’ve created.

You make the rules; if you want rules! No feeling guilty allowed!

Remember: homeschooling is a marathon, not a sprint. The tortoise always wins, and consistency (even imperfect consistency) beats intensity every time. If feel like you’re behind where your goals are for your homeschool, you’re going to catch up if you stick with it.

4. Try Something New (Make This Restart Feel Fresh)

Any Christmas presents that can “present” a new challenge? Did your child receive a new art kit or perhaps a new musical instrument? We got our son a lap harp one year – we got him new sheet music, everything from The Beatles to Beethoven! Explore a new skill and incorporate that into your school day.

New tools and materials can reignite homeschool excitement:

When you add something new to your homeschool routine after a break, it signals to everyone that this isn’t just “back to the same old thing.” It’s a fresh start with new possibilities.

  • A new art kit can launch an art appreciation unit study
  • A new musical instrument can become part of your daily homeschool rhythm
  • A new building set can tie into engineering, architecture, or physics lessons
  • A new craft kit can connect to history or cultural studies you’re covering
  • A new board game can teach strategy, math, probability, or history

Explore a new skill together and make it part of your homeschool day. This serves multiple purposes when restarting after a break:

  1. It gives kids something fresh and exciting to look forward to
  2. It counts as legitimate learning (especially if you can tie it to standards you’re covering)
  3. It breaks up the routine in a positive way after time off
  4. It respects their growing interests and autonomy
  5. It creates positive associations with “going back to school”

The key is making your homeschool restart feel dynamic and exciting rather than stagnant and repetitive. When kids have something new to look forward to, the transition back to learning feels less like a chore and more like an adventure.

Additional Tips for a Smooth Homeschool Restart After Your Break

Review and Refresh Before Moving Forward

One mistake I see homeschool parents make after a break is trying to pick up exactly where they left off, as if no time has passed. But brains need a little warm-up after time away from structured learning!

Spend a day or two reviewing what you covered before the break. This serves multiple purposes for restarting homeschool:

  • It refreshes everyone’s memory and helps prevent frustration
  • It identifies any gaps in understanding that need addressing
  • It builds confidence (“Oh yeah, I remember this!” vs “Remember this now!”)
  • It makes the transition smoother into new material
  • It helps you assess where each child truly is after the break

Think of it like stretching before exercise. You wouldn’t jump straight into a sprint without warming up your muscles first! The same goes for academic muscles after a homeschool break.

Reset Your Homeschool Environment

If your homeschool space got taken over during the break (hello, Christmas Elf Gift Wrapping Headquarters taking up residence in the school room!), take time to reset it before diving back in.

Create a fresh homeschool environment:

  • Clear away holiday decorations or break clutter
  • Restock supplies that ran low before the break
  • Reorganize materials so everything’s easy to find
  • Maybe add something new to freshen up the space – new posters, a plant, rearranged furniture
  • Create a “fresh start” feeling that signals it’s time to get back to learning

A clean, organized homeschool space signals to everyone’s brains that it’s time to get back to business. It also eliminates the frustration of searching for materials or working in a cluttered environment during those crucial first days back.

Adjust Your Homeschool Schedule If Needed

Your pre-break homeschool schedule might not work anymore. Maybe you discovered during the break that your kids are more alert in the afternoon. Maybe your toddler needed a nap at the same time each afternoon. Maybe you realized you were trying to do too many subjects or extracurriculars and need to drop one for now. Or there is an extracurricular no one really liked and you need to stop! No shame in that!

Use the restart as an opportunity to optimize your homeschool routine. Don’t just default back to what you were doing before if it wasn’t working well. This is the perfect time to implement changes you’ve been considering.

Build in Regular Breaks Moving Forward

One reason breaks are so hard when homeschooling is that we make them too rare and then try to cram too much into our “on” times. Consider building smaller, regular breaks into your homeschool year:

  • A long weekend every month for family time
  • Light weeks around holidays to reduce stress
  • Simplified homeschool schedules during particularly busy seasons
  • Regular “catch up” or “free exploration” days built into your routine
  • Seasonal breaks that give everyone time to recharge

This prevents burnout and makes major breaks less disruptive because you’re already practicing the skill of stopping and starting. Your homeschool becomes more sustainable long-term.

When Restarting Homeschool Feels Impossible

Sometimes the resistance to restarting homeschool is more than just post-break sluggishness. If you’re experiencing major pushback from your kids or feeling overwhelmed yourself, consider:

  • Whether your homeschool curriculum is actually a good fit for your family’s learning styles
  • If you’re trying to do too much and need to simplify
  • Whether your kids need more autonomy and choice in their learning
  • If underlying issues (learning challenges, social interaction needs – either too much or too little, family stress) need addressing first
  • Whether you need to have a bigger conversation about homeschooling goals and approach
  • If burnout is setting in and you need more support

Don’t hesitate to make bigger changes if something isn’t working. Homeschooling’s greatest strength is its flexibility – use it! Sometimes a homeschool restart is the perfect opportunity to pivot and try something completely different.

Can’t put your finger on where to fix things? Schedule a session with me and we will work it out together!

The Bottom Line on Restarting Homeschool After a Break

Restarting homeschool after a break doesn’t have to be miserable. With a little planning, some grace for everyone involved, and a willingness to ease back in rather than diving headfirst, you can make the transition smooth and even enjoyable.

Remember the four key strategies:

  • Set a day with your kids’ input so everyone feels prepared
  • Do something fun to rebuild enthusiasm – remember, play IS serious learning
  • Ease into it with reduced schedules or fewer subjects at first
  • Try something new to keep things fresh and exciting

Most importantly, remember why you chose homeschooling in the first place. You have the freedom to make it work for your family, including taking breaks when you need them and restarting on your own terms. You don’t have to follow anyone else’s timeline or expectations.

Now go forth and restart your homeschool with confidence! You’ve got this. And if the first day back is chaotic? That’s okay too. Tomorrow is a new day, and progress is still progress, no matter how small.

What strategies have helped your family restart homeschool after a break? Share in the comments!

Kids playing outside in spring
Holidays, homeschooling

Spring Adventures in Your Homeschool: Joyful Ideas to Bring Nature into Your School Days

“Nothing ever seems impossible in spring, you know.”
~L.M. Montgomery, Anne of Ingleside

As the world bursts into bloom this spring, let’s invite the season’s vibrant energy into our homes with a delightful blend of art, nature, living books, and hands-on learning.

At Homeschool With Joy, I believe in weaving simplicity, faith, and creativity into our days, and today, I’m sharing a spring-inspired plan to spark wonder and connection in your homeschool.

Now that the rush and preparations of Eastertide is wrapping up, we still want to enjoy the fresh feeling of spring while it lasts, until it gets too hot to enjoy being outside more than two seconds here in Texas…

“‘Is the spring coming?,’ he said. ‘What is it like?’… ‘It is the sun shining on the rain and the rain falling on the sunshine and things pushing up and working under the earth,” said Mary.'”
~Frances Hodgson Burnett, The Secret Garden

Using a handful of inspiring resources, we’ll explore nature through art projects, read-alouds, and playful experiments that celebrate the season’s magic.
This Post Contains Affiliate Links.

Grab your nature notebooks, a cup of tea, and let’s dive into this joyful adventure!

🌳Art and the Imagination: There’s something about treehouses to make the spirit feel free. We have an Aaron Becker framed treehouse print in our home and it makes me extremely happy. Check out this You Are An Artist lesson for kids to make their own beautiful treehouse art. This project is no pressure and is good for various art levels.

🕰️Time-Travel Reading Adventure: One of my absolute favorite books on the planet is The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Spring seems like the perfect time to go a hundred years back in time and let the beautiful story unwind around you.

I remember being read aloud the story by my grandmother and now my daughter has memories of us reading it together. My favorite edition is the 100th anniversary edition which includes the original artwork. Below, check out the first chapter free on Amazon.

🤓I feel really cool for having figured out how to embed that…

🖌️Woodland Magic Painting: I cannot say enough good things about Usborne magic painting books. Unlike traditional paint-with-water books with boring, blocky pictures and blocks of difficult-to-work-with paint in the corners of the page, these books have vivid and finely detailed thick pages that are a joy to paint with.

“This book is packed with beautiful woodland scenes for you to bring to life. Simply dip the brush in water and sweep it across the black and white pages to fill the scenes with glorious colours – from squirrels playing in a tree, a badger out at night, a deer and her fawns and lots more.”

📒Nature Notebook: I adore the Nature Notebook from the Good and the Beautiful. Its lush pages just beg you to go out into nature and explore on your own. Sometimes it is hard for my kids to just “go outside” but this book gives them a reason and purpose to do so, while providing knowledge all the while.

At a full 117 pages, there are plenty of activities teaching kids about leaves, bark, tree identification, and more – all divided up by season.

📚Beautiful, Seasonal Booklist: Traditionally when my kids were little, we always did Morning Time! This printable PDF booklist from Read Aloud Revival has plenty of reliably gentle and wonderful tales of the season to share with your kids.

We would always reserve books at the library. If your library doesn’t have them in their regular collection, most libraries have a free or low-cost interlibrary loan option.

🌿Whimsical Leaf Art: What better way to embrace spring than art projects that utilize the imagination as well as leaves and the freshly- blossomed flowers outside? I’m totally obsessed with Thimble and Twig’s beautiful leaf art. These are impressive yet simple and inspire kids to see more in nature than just what is on the surface level. For just a little bit of prep, you can help your kids create memories that last.

🐦Nature Study Packet: The Homeschool Compass never fails me… This beautiful, full-color, and free printable nature study packet has everything you need to easily make an otherwise hum-drum day special.

  • Label the Bird – An educational sheet that asks children to identify and label the parts of a bird
  • What Can You See? – Encourages children to go outside and identify as many creatures as they can in the great outdoors
  • The Signs of Spring – An opportunity for children to get creative and draw what signs of spring they can see in their own backyard
  • Nature Scavenger Hunt – A fun game that will have children exploring outdoors on the hunt for a list of spring and nature inspired items
  • Observing Nature – A worksheet that is designed to help children form an appreciation for the natural world around them
  • Nature Word Search – A fun way to familiarize children with nature words and help to grow their vocabulary

🌈Rainbow Bubble Bottles: Another extremely cool yet extremely fun idea are rainbow bubble bottles! Using food coloring – I prefer natural colors like these – you create iridescent streams of colored bubbles!

All you need is dish soap, food coloring, a sock, a hairband or rubber band, and water bottle. Tada! Instant magic!

By weaving together art, nature, and hands-on experiments, spring becomes a season of joy-filled discovery for your homeschooling journey.

Whether it’s designing treehouses, painting woodland scenes, or documenting discoveries in journals, these activities offer something special for everyone.

Scatter Joy,

Jessica Lovett

Need some ideas on starting your own warm, cozy Morning Music Playlist to scatter joy on busy homeschool mornings?

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