The moment you decide to homeschool, you're hit with a wave of curriculum options that makes choosing a Netflix show look simple. Classical? Charlotte Mason? Montessori? Unschooling? Textbook-based? Online? All-in-one? Mix and match?
Take a breath. We'll walk through the major approaches, who they work best for, and how to decide without losing your mind.
The Major Homeschool Approaches
Classical Education
The classical approach is built on the "trivium" — three stages of learning that match how children's brains develop:
- Grammar Stage (K-4): Memorization and absorption. Kids learn facts, songs, rhymes, and foundational knowledge. They're sponges at this age — use it.
- Logic Stage (5-8): Reasoning and analysis. Kids start asking "why?" about everything. This is when you introduce formal logic, debate, and critical thinking.
- Rhetoric Stage (9-12): Expression and persuasion. Students learn to articulate ideas clearly through writing, speaking, and argumentation.
Best for: Families who value rigorous academics, great books, and structured learning. Kids who are natural readers and love ideas.
Watch out for: Can feel heavy and academic for younger kids. The memorization emphasis in early years isn't for everyone. Requires significant parent preparation.
Popular curricula: Well-Trained Mind, Classical Conversations, Veritas Press, Memoria Press
Charlotte Mason
Charlotte Mason believed education should be about forming good habits, engaging with "living books" (not dry textbooks), and spending time in nature. Her approach emphasizes short lessons, narration (kids telling back what they've learned), and exposure to quality art and music.
Best for: Families who want a gentler, more holistic approach. Kids who learn better through stories than drills. Nature lovers. Families who value character development alongside academics.
Watch out for: Can feel too unstructured for families who need clear benchmarks. Math and science coverage can be lighter unless you supplement.
Popular curricula: Ambleside Online (free!), Simply Charlotte Mason, A Gentle Feast
Montessori
Montessori homeschooling emphasizes child-led learning, hands-on materials, and multi-age interaction. The child follows their interests within a prepared environment.
Best for: Self-directed kids who thrive when given choice. Families with multiple children who can work together across ages. Hands-on learners.
Watch out for: Requires a lot of upfront investment in materials. Can be hard to assess where your child stands relative to grade-level standards. Some kids need more structure than Montessori provides.
Popular curricula: Montessori R&D, Shiller Math, various DIY approaches using Montessori philosophy
Traditional/Textbook
This mirrors what happens in school — textbooks, workbooks, tests, and clear scope-and-sequence. It's the most familiar approach for parents who went through traditional schooling themselves.
Best for: Families who want a structured, predictable routine. Parents who feel more comfortable with a "school at home" setup. Kids preparing for standardized tests.
Watch out for: Can feel like you're recreating school at home (which may be what you were trying to escape). Can be dry and disengaging for some kids.
Popular curricula: Abeka, BJU Press, Saxon (math), Rod and Staff
Eclectic / Mix-and-Match
This is what most homeschool families actually end up doing — picking the best approach for each subject and each child. Maybe you use Singapore Math for math, a Charlotte Mason approach for language arts, and YouTube + experiments for science.
Best for: Families who don't want to commit to a single philosophy. Families with kids who have different learning styles. Parents who enjoy curating their own curriculum.
Watch out for: Can become overwhelming to manage. Gaps can form between subjects if you're not tracking scope and sequence.
Unschooling
Unschooling is completely child-directed learning. No formal curriculum, no required subjects, no tests. The child learns through life experience, following their interests wherever they lead.
Best for: Families with a high tolerance for uncertainty. Self-motivated kids with strong interests. Families with a rich environment of books, experiences, and conversations.
Watch out for: Gaps are inevitable and intentional — which is fine if you're okay with that philosophy. Not compliant with regulations in some states/countries. College preparation can be challenging without formal transcripts.
How to Actually Choose
Here's a practical decision framework:
Step 1: Know your child
- Do they learn better by reading, hearing, or doing?
- Do they thrive with structure or wilt under it?
- Can they work independently, or do they need you beside them?
- Are they a compliant worker or a questioner?
Step 2: Know yourself
- How much time can you realistically dedicate to lesson planning?
- Do you need an open-and-go curriculum, or do you enjoy assembling your own?
- What's your budget?
- How comfortable are you with uncertainty about whether your child is "on track"?
Step 3: Start simple
Don't buy five curricula at once. Pick one approach, try it for 6-8 weeks, and assess. Is your child engaged? Are they learning? Are you losing your mind?
If it's not working, switch. There's no shame in changing. Most homeschool families go through 2-3 approaches in their first year before finding their groove.
Step 4: Supplement with technology
No single curriculum covers everything perfectly. AI tutoring platforms like Trellis can fill gaps, provide extra practice, and give your child an independent learning resource that doesn't require your constant presence.
This is especially valuable for subjects where you feel less confident (looking at you, algebra and chemistry).
The Curriculum-Switching Trap
A warning: it's easy to fall into the cycle of constantly switching curricula every time things get hard. Some struggle is normal. Learning is supposed to be challenging sometimes.
Before switching, ask:
- Is my child struggling with the content or the format?
- Have we given this approach enough time (at least 6 weeks)?
- Am I switching because it's genuinely not working, or because I saw something shiny on a homeschool blog?
What About Multiple Kids?
If you're homeschooling more than one child, your curriculum choice gets more complex. Some tips:
- Combine where possible. History, science, and art can often be taught together across ages. Each child does age-appropriate work on the same topic.
- Individualize math and reading. These are the subjects where each child needs to work at their own level. AI tutoring platforms are perfect for this — each child gets a personalized experience.
- Use loops. Instead of doing every subject every day, use a rotating schedule. Monday: history + math. Tuesday: science + math. Wednesday: art + math. Math stays constant; other subjects rotate.
The Bottom Line
There is no "best" curriculum. There's only the best curriculum for your family, right now, this year. And that answer might change as your kids grow.
Start with one approach. Give it an honest try. Supplement with good tools. And remember: the fact that you're thoughtfully considering your child's education means you're already doing better than you think.
Whatever curriculum you choose, Trellis fills the gaps.
Try Trellis Free