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Making Space for Quiet in Your Homeschool

Everyone needs QUIET.

A homeschool functions better when there are opportunities and spaces for quiet - for both parents and children.

In our world of technology, activity, mobility, and opportunity, a quiet home is often an anomaly. Surely there must be something we should be DOING? Surely there is somewhere we should be GOING?

I find it interesting that the thing I thought I would miss most when we started homeschooling (stretches of quiet) is the very thing I found (after I’d been homeschooling a few years) I could cultivate MORE effectively because I had my children under my roof to educate and guide them.

Making Space for Quiet in Your #Homeschool

My strategies for creating spaces and times for quiet aren’t revolutionary, but I believe we need to be reminded - and, if you will, be given permission to be quiet.

Rest is good. Quiet is good. Stillness in good.

Don’t believe the lie that being the busiest or most involved family on the block is best. It might just be a sign that you aren’t comfortable with quiet.

All of our souls need quiet for creativity, contemplation, and compassion. We need to be comfortable with who we are and we must be comfortable in our silence.


  • Have a Homeschool Routine

I was never a scheduled homeschool mom. One of the luxuries of homeschooling was that we didn’t have to be slave to a “schedule”. I did, however, always have a routine.

Because of this routine my children knew that we would read aloud after breakfast, and math came next. They knew that after lunch we would have time to work on one subject, and then at 1:30 (or thereabouts) each day we would have quiet time.

Children crave predictability and routine. They love structure. During those times when our routine was most steady I noticed fewer temper tantrums, more creativity, and increased sanity for ME! I don’t have any scientific data to back it up, but I firmly believe a homeschool routine inspired quiet!

  • Make Quiet Time a Priority

I’ve written before about why homeschool mamas need quiet time.

This was a hard and fast time in our home until my youngest was about 8 or 9 years old. Sometimes after lunch the kids would/could nap. Other times they just needed to stay in their rooms and occupy themselves quietly.

Initially, this takes training (and sometimes force!), but it is a gift you can give your children. And then guess what? When kids are having quiet, YOU can have quiet, too. Read a book, organize a cabinet, take a nap - whatever recharges you - make time to do it during quiet time.

  • Tame the Technology

This is probably the biggest hurdle to jump, isn’t it?

Even if you put away devices for an official “quiet time”, everyone’s brains are still running on overdrive because of the stimulation they have previously received from devices.

I would suggest to you that you strictly limit the technology in your homeschool. Can you homeschool with little to no technology at all? Or, if you feel that using technology is a skill you want your children to master, choose a few things of beauty that your children take part in online (how about joining me in my SQUILT Music Appreciation classes online?).

  • Incorporate the Arts

Our souls are at rest when we have been exposed to things of beauty.

Have you ever done one of Nana’s Chalk Pastel tutorials? She has such a quiet, calm, and simple way of helping children create something of beauty.

What about music? Simply turning on a Spotify Mozart station can create a relaxing atmosphere in your home. Or, incorporating Super Quiet UnInterrupted Listening Time (SQUILT) monthly listening calendars such a simple to daily incorporate music into your life.

A vibrant arts education in your homeschool can help your children be comfortable with quiet - and also enables them to be quiet as they are creating.

  • Strew Quiet Toys & Books Through Your Home

I was always a big fan of strewing when my children were younger.

strew (verb): to scatter or spread (things) untidily over a surface or area.

Our children need gentle guidance towards things that inspire quiet.

Keep a stock of games and toys your children can use alone. Make sure you make frequent library visits and strew books about what you are currently studying around the house.

Children can be gently tempted to stop and play, read, and wonder. It is a beautiful thing.

  • Get Outside and Wonder (and be LOUD)!

In order to inspire more quiet, you have to provide opportunities for your children to be WILD and LOUD!

Do you remember that homeschool routine you have? Be sure to incorporate a lot of physical activity, nature walks, and time to just be outside and explore! If our children are worn out, happy, and have eliminated a lot of frustrations through physical activity, then making space for quiet, later on, will be infinitely easier.

Don’t forget Nature Study - you might enjoy The 3 Rs of Nature Study if your need EASY ideas.

And, unstructured play outside if good - I routinely told my kids to go outside and play in the woods! I was amazed at how much better our days were when this could be part of the routine.

Making Space for Quiet in Your #homeschool
  • The Self-Discipline to Say NO

Finally, we need to get off the hamster wheel. Our children will never be comfortable with quiet if they are too busy and frazzled.

You don’t have to take part in every activity your best homeschool friends take part in. If you don’t feel it is in your family’s best interest for your child to play an organized sport, DON’T DO IT. Saying no may be hard in the moment, but the freedom it brings in the long-term is liberating.


You can start creating space for quiet TODAY in your homeschool. I promise. It’s worth it.

Do you have a way you gain quiet in your homeschool?

Share it with me in the comments below.

You might also like:

Why Watch the Birds?

3 Keys to a Successful Homeschool

Weekly Homeschool Roundup - 2/1/20

We made it to February!

Are you still feeling that beginning of the calendar year slump?

If you ask my 15-year-old, he will tell you he has A LOT of schoolwork, basketball season is almost over, and he is trying to complete all of his TeenPact homework! I know he is overwhelmed, and to be honest, so am I.

One thing I have learned, however, is that all things are temporary, and pushing through during these months of struggle produces great fruit. And, because we are homeschoolers, we always have the opportunity to STOP what we are doing or to adjust our schedules if we need a break.

Weekly Homeschool Roundup - 2/1/20

We came across this quote in a book we’re reading aloud right now; I found it so appropriate to how we’re feeling.

Sometimes, to become an expert we have to be faithful in the small things - being faithful in the small things requires steady, focused effort. We don’t see the rewards right away, but eventually, the hard work will pay off. This is an important lesson for our children and one I am thankful we can learn through homeschooling.

My son is working on expertise in languages (he studies Latin & Spanish), piano, and basketball.

If we “consign ourselves to a life of mediocrity”, how can we affect change in our world?

Weekly Homeschool Roundup - 2/1/20

(stepping off my soapbox now to bring you the weekly good things…)


Five Good Homeschool Things:

  • Kindred Homeschool Conference

    Registration is now open for the Kindred Homeschool Conference! This one-day (Feb. 22), online conference is full of encouragement and practicality. The speakers are four homeschool moms who are right in the trenches with you - with children of ALL ages. I wish we would have had conferences like this when I was a young homeschool mom!

  • Inventor & Invention Themed Morning Basket

    February 11th is National Inventors’ Day, and I love this themed morning basket that Jessica, from the Waldock Way, has put together. It is just these types of resources that will add variety and inspiration for your children. While you’re looking at this basket, check out the other morning time baskets Jessica has put together!

  • How To Remember More of What You Read

    “The ultimate goal of reading shouldn’t just be memorization, but reflection and insight.”

    Right? But sometimes it seems that my high schooler (and if I’m being honest - me, too!) doesn’t remember a lot of what he has read. This article contains good strategies. I agree 100% that more ACTIVE reading (taking notes, discussing what you read, marking up the text) helps tremendously with memory.

  • Watergate Salad

    My son and I finished reading Born Again, by Chuck Colson. There have been many discussions about Watergate and the Nixon era in our home.

    When the kids were little I would try to incorporate food from our studies into our meals. Maybe it’s a stretch, but I made Watergate Salad as part of our dinner last night. Actually, I served it in a vintage Corning Ware bowl that was my mother’s, and we learned that the recipe came from the Watergate Hotel and was very popular in the Midwest because of the popularity of JellO.

  • The Dearly Beloved

    This book wrecked me - in a very good way. It has come so highly recommended, and now I understand why. I don’t want to give too much away, but it is a moving read for mothers (especially mothers of special needs children), wives, friends, and people who have experienced doubt at any in their walk with God.

    If you don’t have much time to read, I would put this one at the top of your list this year - it is well worth your time.

As always, if you feel led, leave me a comment.

Do you have a “good thing” to share?