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10 Insanely Easy Ways to Homeschool During the Holidays

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Thanksgiving through New Year’s is often exhausting and stressful. Take the stress out of your homeschool with these tips to homeschool during the holidays without losing your mind.

homeschool during the holidays

As much as I love the holiday season from Thanksgiving to New Year’s, it is often an exhausting, stressful time. We cram the weeks with more activities and travel than usual. (And more people. My fellow introverts will understand.) Add to that the shopping (ack!), baking, wrapping, and homeschooling.

Instead of stressing this year, try these tips for:

10 Insanely Easy Ways to Homeschool During the Holidays!

1. Do a unit study or other hands-on activity.

Use the weeks between Thanksgiving and Christmas to break from your regular curriculum and try a unit study or other hands-on activity. Here are some suggestions to get you started:

Try ADVENTure Schooling!

Do a Unit Study.

Do Some Other Fun Holiday-Related Activities and Lessons.

2. Give unschooling a try.

This busy holiday season, give unschooling a try. Not sure where to start? This article explains what unschooling is and suggests resources for learning more.

homeschool during the holidays

3. Relax your expectations.

Don’t expect to get it all done. Don’t expect your kids to have their usual focus – even if their usual focus is already somewhat lacking. Instead of writing lesson plans and stressing over what’s gone undone, go with the flow and log what you have accomplished at the end of each day. The holiday season is just a season. It doesn’t define your entire homeschool year.

If you have young children, try some fun Christmas-related printable lessons like the ones below. If you have older children and younger children, let the older kids help the younger kids. That’s a great way for the older kids to get a refresher without even realizing it!

Language Arts/Grammar

Handwriting

Math

Other Fun Christmas-Related Activities

homeschool during the holidays

4. Capitalize on hands-on learning opportunities.

Sometimes we get so caught up in checking off lesson plan boxes that we overlook the educational moments in the everyday. There are so many hands-on learning opportunities to help you homeschool during the holidays which are already woven into your family’s holiday traditions. Take advantage of those opportunities!

5. Delve into handicrafts.

Also, don’t forget the importance of handicrafts. Letting your kids work on those often-overlooked skills as they create homemade Christmas gifts and ornaments equals a win-win situation!

Try these ideas for decorations and Christmas crafts to share!

Or try these ideas for crafts you can give as Christmas gifts. 

If you celebrate Hanukkah, try one of these crafts!

6. Serve others.

Not only is serving others personally satisfying, but you can document service hours on your teen’s high school transcripts and college applications. So, don’t feel that you have to choose between school time and service time. Service is a wonderful way to homeschool during the holidays.

Volunteer at a soup kitchen or homeless shelter. Prepare meals for struggling (financially or emotionally – Christmas isn’t a joyous season for everyone) families or collect and donate canned goods and non-perishable foods to your local food bank.

Or use some of the ideas found on this Christmas Kindness Calendar.

7. Try loop scheduling.

If you really must check off lesson plan boxes, move everything to a loop schedule during the holidays. Loop scheduling lets you progress through the schoolwork you need to finish without the constant pressure of feeling behind.

8. Cut back to the basics.

Don’t try to do all the things this Christmas season. That leaves you stressed and burned out, and your kids feed on your emotions. Cut back to the basics. All the books, lesson plans, and science experiments will still be there waiting for you in January. I promise.

Or try ADVENTure schooling. It’s a great way to keep your kids learning while celebrating the true reason for Christmas.

9.  Reconsider the basics.

We’ve had the Three R’s drilled into our heads. Reading, writing, and arithmetic make up the quintessential basics list. But for artistic kids or right-brained learners, consider that the basics might mean art, music, or drama.

And, the Christmas season is an excellent time to delve into those subjects with Christmas plays, cantatas, caroling, and ballets. These are all ways to homeschool during the holidays.

10. Don’t.

Just don’t homeschool during the holidays. We homeschool year-round so that we can take off school from Thanksgiving until New Years. It makes the season so much less stressful and more enjoyable for all of us.

That doesn’t mean we don’t do anything over the holiday season. But what we do is not our usual routine. Instead, we do things like some of the suggested activities on this Christmas Kindness Calendar.

With all the shopping and baking and traveling along with the cantatas and Christmas plays and candlelight services, the Christmas season is busy enough without the added stress of trying to maintain your regular school schedule. Cut yourself and your kids some slack so you can enjoy the season and focus on Christ, family, and friends.

What are some of your best “homeschool during the holidays” tips?

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7 Comments

  1. I appreciate this reminder. I’m already feeling run down because we just moved. Another problem of mine is that I forget to do some of the fun things, like handicrafts, with my youngest kids because I’ve done those things with my oldest. So here’s to busting out the popsicle sticks and paint!

  2. I love these ideas! Thank you! This is my second year homeschooling, and we love it, but I still struggle with wanting to get certain things done, and being willing to relax and just enjoy learning different things .I think incorporating a mini-unit around World Christmas celebrations with a much lighter “school” load might be a great compromise.

  3. I think this time of the year kids are kind of tired of doing school work. I usually stop what we are doing and have them tell me what they want to learn. I love structure but I find my kids remember and learn best when they learn about they want to learn. So this holiday season we will be spending more time baking, making Christmas cards, and learning all there is to learn about snowman and radios. Thanks for this list and enjoy the holiday. Be blessed. 🙂

  4. Thanks for sharing these tips, it’s interesting and helpful indeed. I always find serving others to be enjoyable,it makes me feel I’ve made a very good use of my time, for serving those that are in need.

  5. I like the last one: just don’t. That’s what we did last year & we’re close to coming to a full stop again. At least with pulling out the math book and such. Learning still happens. It’s inevitable! And even taking 4 weeks off we still get through it all by summer. Ah, the beauty of homeschooling.

  6. For years we just unschooled from Thanksgiving until New Year’s. Nowadays my son is more independent and we are able to take a 2 week break at Christmas and New Year’s and then get back to it. But we do take several unschoolibreaks throughout the year.

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