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homeschool charter schools

Homeschooling with a Charter School

April 22, 2023 · In: For Moms, How to Start Homeschooling, Middle + High School

Some links on this page are affiliate links which means that, if you choose to make a purchase, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I greatly appreciate your support!

This post is all about the pros and cons of homeschooling with a charter school.

charter school

A few weeks ago, I polled Instagram to see if there were any questions regarding homeschooling with a charter school. Some high levels of curiosity followed, which I’m happy to address.

With the different options to homeschooling legally in your state, choosing the charter school route can be intimidating without enough information. Knowing the potential of what you’re walking into prior to applying will be helpful.

I have homeschooled with a charter school for 7 years now, and can share the pros and cons from our own experience. Without too many details online, practically speaking, this is an avenue I hope to shed more light on so you can make an informed decision.

[RELATED POST: Where to Begin with Homeschooling?]

What is a Charter School

Charter schools are public schools that independently operating and managed from a school district. However, they do operate similarly to a public school in that they are tuition-free, non-religious, and not-for-profit. Most require some form of state testing that align with state standards. Additionally, they must serve all students, and accommodate for special needs education.

Each charter school has a variance in their offerings and rules, but this is just to provide a general idea of how they may operate in your local area.

Pros of Homeschooling with a Charter School

Guidance

One thing I have valued in homeschooling with a charter school is having a teacher provide guidance. It has been a blessing that the teacher I have is a friend I had known beforehand, and we share the same foundation and beliefs in our why for homeschooling. I know not every teacher is guaranteed to be helpful in that way, but if you can find the right fit, it makes this whole process much easier.

The school provides virtual learning and encouragement for me as a homeschool teacher. Their middle school and high school guidance has been especially helpful in considering the next steps. Many of the teachers have children who have graduated homeschoolers or are at least a few steps ahead of me. In turn, they are able to offer great counsel from the perspective of experience.

Assessments

This may sound like a con in your mind, but state assessments have been an unexpected pro! In the early elementary years, our charter school has us take an early literacy and math assessment at the beginning of the year, and again at the end of the year. While test scores come with so much subjectivity, I value seeing a general idea of their growth in those areas.

In 5th grade, our school administers a physical fitness test, which is really like a get outdoors kind of event. They run a timed mile, and have 4 stations of simple exercises to measure stamina, flexibility, and strength. Our kids have enjoyed these days very much.

Charter School Freebies

I had no idea there were so many freebies offered! Here are just a few that I’ve been offered. Some I have used, and some I didn’t need, but it was nice to know it was available.

  • Technology: this can include laptops, e-readers, Chrome books, and iPads.
  • Online Subscriptions: they offer access to some annual subscriptions to education programs like IXL, BrainPop, Adobe Creative Cloud, and Grammarly.
  • Field Trips: teachers within the school will organize group field trips for all ages and interests each month. These can include whale watching trips, baseball stadium tours, professional musical performances, museum, zoo, and barn visits. Most require a fee, which you can use your funding for, but the planning is all done for you.

Charter School Funding

Public charter schools typically offer funding for each student. The amount ranges by grade level, but can be $2000-$4000 per student per school year. The amount provided is held in an account where you can request to spend on approved educational products or services.

Educational products

Examples of educational products you can use your funding on is wide and varied. The school’s approved vendors (including Amazon) make it easy to narrow it down. Keep in mind that anything that is non-consumable like books or an Osmo must be returned to the school upon withdrawal. So, I try to keep it to consumable products to not have to worry about remembering to return it. Real life products our family has used funding for:

  • common school supplies: notebooks, 3-ring binders, writing tools, glue sticks, watercolor paint and paper, scissors
  • printer ink
  • workbooks for reinforcement (i.e., Explode the Code, Mad Libs, Summer workbooks)
  • curriculum: non-religious curriculum can be purchased through approved vendors (i.e., Fix It Grammar, Beautiful Feet literature packs, and science lab kits from Nature’s Workshop)

educational services

Personally, I prefer to use our funding on services to avoid the hassle of returning a non-consumable item. This has been a blessing! The school has a comprehensive list of approved educational vendors where you can request to use your funding. Real life services we have accessed with funding:

  • music classes
  • dance classes
  • swimming lessons
  • art classes
  • foreign language online subscription

Formalities

Being under an umbrella school like this has offered a few benefits of the school formalities. We get a student ID and help with additional homeschool discounts and perks. My graduating middle schooler has the opportunity to walk in a middle school graduation, which we will be participating in. There are

High School Years

As I am planning for my first child to enter high school, I am finding a lot of guidance and counsel for how to navigate this season. I am not certain we will continue with a charter school all thoughout our homeschool journey, but we are committed to seeing what it is like for the upcoming freshman year.

I have attended 2 virtual meetings for high school preparation, and have been able to ask all my questions. You get assigned to a specific high school counselor, who can help with your student’s individual career or college track plans.

Cons of Homeschooling with a Charter School

You Have Accountability

Most of my pros and cons can be seen as a pro or a con, depending on where you are at. Accountability comes in the form of turning in monthly attendance, work samples, and check ins. Elementary and middle school grades require one subject work sample per month (determined by the school), while high school requires a work sample for every subject per month.

You Have Rules

One thing most homeschoolers value is freedom, so I can totally understand not wanting to have rules in education. Being a part of a school comes with their set of standards and formalities. We do our best to abide by the rules of the school, and have not had any issue.

Faith-based products or services are not allowed to be purchased with funding, but it doesn’t change that our family and personal life is very much lived in pursuit of following Jesus. If we use faith based curricula or study the Bible together, that is always out of pocket. No complaints, but I can see how some families would prefer no rules.

Everything Comes at a Cost

As with any decision, the path you choose has a cost. For elementary and middle school so far, the cost has been worthy of the choice. We’ll see how high school fares as I know the requirements increase significantly.

This post is all about the pros and cons of homeschooling with a charter school.

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By: juiceboxhomeschool · In: For Moms, How to Start Homeschooling, Middle + High School · Tagged: best homeschool programs, homeschool charter schools, homeschool options, homeschooling in california, money for homeschooling, public charter school

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Comments

  1. Redeemed Mama says

    June 10, 2023 at 2:52 pm

    Thanks for sharing! Looking forward to hearing more on high school with the charter. We plan to leave our charter for high school but would love your opinion on it and if you felt you could teach the way you wanted.

    Reply
    • juiceboxhomeschool says

      June 22, 2023 at 3:09 am

      I totally understand! I’m trying it out for freshman year for the exact reason you are talking about. 🙂

      Reply
    • Brooke Clark says

      March 8, 2024 at 4:07 pm

      I want to know how to do this! Does your child go to the charter certain days of the wk and you homeschool the other!!

      Reply
      • juiceboxhomeschool says

        March 9, 2024 at 6:21 pm

        We homeschool 100%, and the charter school just helps us with record keeping overall. I have explored hybrid schools where they go to a physical school two days a week, and homeschool at home the other days, however, that option didn’t fit our family well.

        Reply
  2. faith says

    July 28, 2023 at 12:25 am

    We’re homeschooling for the first time this year (1st grade) and i’m really excited about our charter so far! Curious about one thing with curriculum–we’ve liked using The Good and the Beautiful for Language arts but of course can’t use that under the charter umbrella because it is religious. When you choose to use faith based materials do you find another way to show what the students are learning when you submit work samples or just choose different curricula all together? Any advice would be helpful, thank you!

    Reply
    • juiceboxhomeschool says

      July 28, 2023 at 2:50 am

      Hi! Yes, I abide by their guidelines for work samples. I use Teachers Pay Teachers, science lab reports, or written narration samples from our readings. While we are faith based in our family life, I aim for our education to be a wide feast.

      Reply
  3. Sarah Salas says

    October 11, 2023 at 8:32 pm

    I live in Houston Texas and currently have a 3 almost 4 year old and a baby 1 year old. I can’t find any information about being able to homeschool through a Charter School in my area. I love your website and have read a lot of your helpful articles. Could you please help me?

    Reply
    • juiceboxhomeschool says

      October 12, 2023 at 3:43 pm

      Thank you so much! A Google search pulled this site up: https://txcharterschools.org/. I would try local FB homeschool groups too!

      Reply

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We talk a lot about academics in homeschooling… bu We talk a lot about academics in homeschooling… but what about capability? #ad

Raising kids who can think, act, contribute, and take initiative in the real world, that’s the long game. I’ve been reading Capable from @sissygoff @raisingboysandgirls and @bethany_house_nonfiction, and it’s been such a timely reminder for me in this season with older kids.

A few small shifts I’m focusing on lately:
• inviting more ownership in daily responsibilities
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When the homeschool slump hits, I try to add in tr When the homeschool slump hits, I try to add in trusted resources I know they will enjoy. It usually happens around this time when the books aren’t hitting the same, the kids are a little weary, and you are too. #ad

If everyone can use a fresh spark in the homeschool rhythm, check out Night Zookeeper! It’s been such a fun shift in our days. It gives a structured language arts program, but in a way that feels playful and engaging. A perfect little spring reset.

✔️ Guided reading + writing through “Quests”
✔️ Creative prompts that actually get them excited to write
✔️ A parent dashboard so I can still check in on their progress

If you’re needing a reset right now, this is a good one 🤍

Comment “night” and I’ll send you a link to try it for free!

#homeschoolmom #nightzookeeper #homeschoolhelp #homeschoolcurriculum homeschoolrhythm
This principle is one I came back to when I was te This principle is one I came back to when I was tempted to simplify things too much for my kids, especially in their younger years. Mason believed children have the mental power to engage with real, rich, meaningful knowledge presented as living ideas. A generous curriculum. A trusting heart. 

It was never close to a perfect scene, and I didn’t consistently have the positive homeschool vibes 😅, but I can see now how the Lord can still use that! The blessing of homeschooling is time, but when you do it for the long run, you also get to see the other side of those early challenges and doubts.

Which subjects are giving your family life lately? Drop it below and check out other #charlottemasonmondays friends sharing on #cmmprinciple11 today:

@truthgoodness_and_beauty
@the.henderson.haus
@hannahs.healthyhabits
@notebookingwithdelight
@juiceboxhomeschool
@livingideasplanner

#charlottemasoninspired #homeschoollife homeschoolhighschool
In honor of Mother’s Day, I’m sharing a few storie In honor of Mother’s Day, I’m sharing a few stories with mom figures we adore! Let me know yours in a comment below.

🌻 All-of-a-Kind-Family: Cilly Brenner, aka Mama, was written after the author’s own mother, and the series is based on her childhood experiences on New York City’s Lower East Side.
🌻 Heartwood Hotel, Home Again: Mona’s mother is a figure from the past who is revealed to have been a talented cook, similar to Mona’s new friend, Strawberry.
🌻 The Vanderbeekers to the Rescue: Mama is a professional pastry chef who bakes from their Harlem brownstone with her 5 children.
🌻 Kisses from Katie: Katie Majors’ story revolves around her adoption of 14 Ugandan girls and her work as the director of a non-profit organization that provides support to hundreds of other children.
🌻 Star of Light: Kinza’s mother, Zohra, and a caring nurse work hard to protect Zohra’s blind daughter.
🌻 A Place to Hang the Moon: A friendly librarian makes the world of a difference to 3 young orphans fleeing London during WWII.

Have you read any of these? What literary mom comes to find as one of your family’s favorites?

More from #livingbooklegacy here:

@agoodbookhunt
@playinghomeschool
@thisnewday_

#livingbooks #readaloudfamily #homeschoolreadalouds #homeschooling morningbasket juiceboxreads
One thing the homestretch of homeschooling is teac One thing the homestretch of homeschooling is teaching me is this: so much of what felt small in the early years was actually foundational.

The habit of attention, a steady homeschool rhythm to our days, narrations, chores, church life, nature study, discipline, family read alouds... 

At the time, it can feel repetitive and almost invisible. At times, it felt like a fight to keep at it and not lose my mind.

Years later, those same practices begin showing up with a new look. I see focus, initiative, spiritual rootedness, a sense of responsibility, and connectedness.

We are planting and toiling, often unseen, long before we see a hint of growth.

The fruit may come slowly, but it does come. 🤍

Save this for the days when the small things feel insignificant. What seeds are you planting in this season?

More from #homestretchhomeschooling here:
@rootedinrest
@redefiningschool
@delightfullyfeastingpress

#homeschoollife #homeschoolmom #homeschoolrhythm #motherhood
Nothing brings science curriculum to life like inc Nothing brings science curriculum to life like including hands-on science labs for kids! I used to dread science experiments because it just felt like a lot of work, but here are some things that have eased the process:

🔬 Remind your child and yourself that the goal of science labs are to discover, experiment, and let your curiosity play. It’s meant to be fun, not perfect!
🔬 Fun may mean a little mess to clean at the end, and that’s okay because we will all help clean up.
🔬 If you can, purchase a supplemental lab kit. I personally love @naturesworkshop - they have supplies organized by lesson, which was a game changer.
🔬 I found these “messy mats” online that are waterproof and help contain things. We use them for science labs and art projects to protect surfaces.
🔬 Use a notebook to record lab findings and/or take photos to print and save in their notebooks. We like the @apologiaworld colorful and engaging student notebooks for processing information well and making each lesson fun! Use code “TRISHA10” for a discount on those.

Do your kids like doing science labs in your homeschool? Share your tips for ACTUALLY DOING THEM!

Comment “science” for the direct link to some of our favorite products, including 25% all new products at Apologia! I highly recommend taking a look at the Activity Videos for Astronomy and Earth Science! 👌🏻 

#sciencelab #sciencecurriculum #homeschoolscience #apologiascience #homeschoolmom
If you want books that quietly shape character, st If you want books that quietly shape character, start here...

Some of the books that have added a lot to our homeschool most deeply are the true stories. 🤍

There is something so powerful about placing real lives in front of our kids. Stories of courage, conviction, sacrifice, faith, and ordinary people choosing obedience in hard moments stay with them in such a different way.

Some longtime favorites:
📚 Portraits of Integrity: A Family Treasury, real people who demonstrated Godly character
📚 YWAM biographies, which have made such meaningful family read-alouds over the years, and wonderful independent reads for middle schoolers.

These kinds of books have sparked some of our best conversations about character and what it looks like to live with purpose.

If you love biography-rich homeschooling too, comment “books” and I’ll send over some of our family favorites.

More from #livingbooklegacy here:
@treasuredhourbooks
@brittsbookbin
@delightfullyfeastingpress
@agoodbookhunt
@thisnewday_
@brave.little.learners
@playinghomeschool
@moraviapress
@letthemlovelearning
@blessedwithmotherhood

#biographiesforkids #familyreadalouds #juiceboxreads #booksforkids
Some things I’m not planning to repeat with my you Some things I’m not planning to repeat with my younger kids (sorry, first kid! 😉)...

Not that the first time was a big fail, but walking through the high school years has a way of shaping you.

There are things I see a little clearer.
There are things I want to hold with more gentleness.
There are things I don’t want to rush past.

Homeschooling in different seasons has reminded me that we’re growing right alongside our kids. These are just a few quiet shifts I’m making as I go.

If you’re in a similar season, I’d love to hear. What is something you’re doing differently now?

More from #homestretchhomeschooling friends tagged in the last slide!

#homeschoolmom #homeschoollife #motherhoodjourney #homeschoolingteens
POV: the coziest little reading corner just levele POV: the coziest little reading corner just leveled up ✨📚

We added this 360° rotating bookshelf from @Flycitymall and my daughter had the best time filling it with her favorite books, games, and even a stuffy.

It’s one of those pieces that’s both practical and pretty... everything within reach, easy to rotate, and somehow makes reading feel even more inviting.

Ours is the gold 5-tier, but they have other colors and sizes depending on your space!

If you’ve been looking for a simple way to make books more visible and loved in your home, this is such a sweet option.

Comment “bookshelf” and I’ll send you the link + my discount code!

#flycitymall #flycity #RotatingBookshelf #livingbooks #homeschoollife
Some of our very favorite stories are those we hav Some of our very favorite stories are those we have read together and have a strong theme of FAMILY.

The kind of stories that squash our own bickering, bring everyone on the same page, and gently shape how our kids see family, unity, and what really matters.

These are a few of our favorite family-centered living books we’ve come back to over the years. Those special stories that I will want to keep my shelf long after they are grown!

If you’re looking to add more of that to your days, I’d love to share a larger list of favorite family read-alouds with you.

Comment “books” and I’ll send you the link 📚

More from #livingbooklegacy here:
@treasuredhourbooks
@juiceboxhomeschool
@thisnewday_
@letthemlovelearning

#juiceboxreads #livingbooks #homeschoolmom #readalouds
This giveaway is now closed. Sometimes the car c This giveaway is now closed. 

Sometimes the car can become one of the easiest places for learning!

If you’re looking for a simple way to help kids practice Scripture memory, the Teach Me the Faith podcast from Generations Ministries is such a helpful tool. The episodes are short, engaging, and designed especially for kids, making them easy to play while driving to activities or running errands.

Generations also created a bundle of resources that pair beautifully with the podcast, including:

📖 a companion book
🎨 a coloring book
⭐️ a sticker pack

I’m excited to give away 5 of these bundles to bless a few families in this community!

To enter:

1️⃣ Follow @juiceboxhomeschool and @generations.min 
2️⃣ Like this post
3️⃣ Comment below and share one place your family loves listening to podcasts or audio learning (car rides, breakfast time, quiet time, etc.). You will receive a link to see details of this bundle on their website.

That’s it!

Giveaway will close on Friday, 3/20 at 1pm PST, and winners will be announced in stories. This fun giveaway is not associated with Meta in any way.

#christianhomeschool #scripturememory #homeschoolresources #homeschoolmom #podcastforkids
The quiet homeschool days rarely make the highligh The quiet homeschool days rarely make the highlight reel, but they tend to be the ones that shape the most. 🤍

Homeschooling is rarely flashy.
Mostly it’s small, ordinary moments that slowly add up over time.

If you ever feel like your days look too simple, save this as a reminder that simple is often exactly where the building happens. 

#cmmditl from #charlottemasonmondays here:
@livingideasplanner
@moraviapress
@notebookingwithdelight
@aroundtheworld_homeschool

#homeschooling #homeschoolditl #charlottemasoninspired
History in our homeschool has become one of the si History in our homeschool has become one of the simplest parts of our day.

There are so many good ways to study history, but for us, history has slowly grown into something that feels a little more like gathering.

🙌🏼 We read stories together.
🙌🏼 The kids keep simple narration journals.
🙌🏼 We talk about what stood out and what felt difficult.
🙌🏼 Sometimes we watch a short video to add another perspective.

It is not fancy. 

One of my favorite parts is hearing what resonates or surprises my kids. Their thoughts often lead us into the best informal conversations.

If you are homeschooling multiple ages, doing history family style has also helped simplify our rhythm.

This is just a small peek into how history looks in our home right now with my 5th and 8th graders. My oldest is currently taking a government course at a community college online.

I would love to hear from you. How does history work in your homeschool these days?

And if this gave you an idea to try, feel free to save it for later. 

#charlottemasonmondays

#cmmhowwestudyhistory
@truthgoodness_and_beauty
@juiceboxhomeschool
@moraviapress
@notebookingwithdelight
@arrowsforchrist
@livingideasplanner
@hannahs.healthyhabits
@aroundtheworld_homeschool

#historycurriculum #beautifulfeetbooks #homeschoolcurriculum charlottemasoninspired
If you’ve ever ended the day feeling behind… this If you’ve ever ended the day feeling behind… this is for you.

Education is life.

Not a checklist.
Not a race.
Not something to “get done.”

For a long time, I thought a good homeschool day meant we finished everything in the planner.

But over the years, and especially now in the teen years, I’m seeing the effects of the faithful day-to-day.

Education is happening...
in the mealtime conversations.
in the living books that stir empathy.
in the habit of finishing what we start.
in learning to apologize, to serve quietly, and to try again.

You probably heard that Charlotte Mason stated that education is life. Believe or not, but formation is happening even on the days that feel messy and unproductive.

It’s not only about what our kids know, but about who they are becoming. That kind of education doesn’t always fit neatly in your homeschool planner spread.

What “counted” as education in your home this week? 

More from the #charlottemasonmondays crew:
#cmmprinciple8
@truthgoodness_and_beauty
@moraviapress
@arrowsforchrist
@hannahs.healthyhabits
@livingideasplanner

#charlottemason #charlottemasoninspired homeschoolingteens
Giveaway is now closed. After a month of using S Giveaway is now closed. 

After a month of using Simply Piano, my daughter is actually asking to play… just for fun. 🎹 Her confidence has grown so much, and that daily practice streak has been the best motivator. #ad

I’m so excited because one of you will win a family subscription, which includes access for up to 5 students plus Simply Guitar, Simply Draw, and Simply Sing. Such a fun way to add more creativity to your homeschool or family rhythm!

How to Enter:

1️⃣ Like this post
2️⃣ Follow @hellosimplypiano + @juiceboxhomeschool
3️⃣ Comment “piano” to receive a special link where you can have up to 4 additional users for the price of 1! 🎉

Giveaway closes on Monday, 3/2/26 at 1pm PST, and is in no way associated with Instagram. The winner will be contacted via DM by this account only.

#simplypianohomeschool #homeschoolresources #pianoforkids homeschooling
At the start of the year, I shared in IG stories t At the start of the year, I shared in IG stories that we revisited our homeschool boundaries. So many great questions came in surrounding this topic! They exist to make the most of our time and to build and practice healthy habits for the long run.

Homeschool burdens did become lighter when I decided what we needed, and let the rest go. 🤍 These are a few boundaries that helped when my kids were younger, and some that are guiding our days right now. They are flexible as each season, child, moment organically requires.

What boundaries have served your homeschool days well lately? Or what would you like to try to implement?

#homeschoolboundaries #homeschoolsanity #homeschoolmom #homeschoolrhythm #homeschoolplanning
These are the Bible studies working well for us in These are the Bible studies working well for us in this season of homeschooling an elementary, middle schooler, and high schooler.

My personal study: Christ in All of Scripture
This study is designed for one-year, but hey, it’s going to be a two-year study for me (seasonally pausing to pick up other studies with my church)! I love the style and length because it is clear, beautiful, and helps me stay consistent, even on busy weeks.

For different levels of readers: Faithfulness Series
My kids are using the Increase Faithfulness series for individual study. If you have children of different reading and comprehension levels, this one offers 3 different levels on the same topics. You can learn the same truths together!

For family-style around the table: Proverbs
I appreciate this open-and-go shot of wisdom for us all. It includes short commentary plus discussion questions for easy conversations during morning meetings.

If you’re wanting something that supports both your personal study and family discipleship, these have been such a sweet fit in this season.

Comment “Bible” and I’ll send you the blog post with all of these linked.

What Bible study are you loving right now?

Check out #livingbooklegacy for more ideas:
@brittsbookbin
@moraviapress
@juiceboxhomeschool
@letthemlovelearning

#biblestudy #familybiblestudy #homeschooling #morningbasket
If you’ve been wanting an Easter study that’s Scri If you’ve been wanting an Easter study that’s Scripture-rich, family-friendly, and actually doable, take a look at Above Every Name!

What stands out to me:
✅ clear structure that doesn’t weigh down mornings
✅ prompts that lead to real conversation
✅ works well with multiple ages
✅ pages you’ll actually want to come back to
✅ keeps the focus where it belongs!

I’m sharing a few favorite features in this post. Comment “Easter,” and I’ll send you a closer look!

Thank you to @notconsumed for gifting this study. We have completed several of their Bible studies, and I tend to level up a couple years from the suggested age range, but check the samples to see for yourself!

#easterstudy #biblestudyforkids #homeschooling #biblecurriculum #notconsumed
Author Spotlight: Grace Lin Her books are full of Author Spotlight: Grace Lin

Her books are full of heart, heritage, and hope, and I love how they bring light in by opening windows to new stories.

Here are the titles pictured: 
The Ugly Vegetables
Kite Flying
Bringing in the New Year
Fortune Cookie Fortunes
Dumpling Days

She has many more books, too! Have you read Grace Lin yet? 
👇 Drop your favorite title below.

More author spotlights from #livingbooklegacy here:

@moraviapress
@playinghomeschool
@thisnewday_
@letthemlovelearning

Determined to get it together and post early this week.

#gracelin #aapiauthors #authorspotlight #juiceboxreads
Charlotte Mason’s Principle 7 reminds me that disc Charlotte Mason’s Principle 7 reminds me that discipline doesn’t have to feel heavy or harsh. It’s steady and formative. It grows and shapes over time, and that discipline can be so delightfully rewarding.

If you’re in a season where consistency feels hard, this is your reminder to keep going, with graciousness toward yourself and others.

Save this for the days you need the reminder.

In our season, we are working on the habit of orderliness. Which habit are you nurturing right now?

More on #cmmprinciple7 here:

@arrowsforchrist 
@livingideasplanner
@juiceboxhomeschool
@moraviapress
@hannahs.healthyhabits

#charlottemasonmondays #charlottemasonhomeschool #homeschoolrhythms #homeschoolencouragement
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