Making Homeschool Fun: Ultimate Guide

The homeschool day can be quite efficient, compared to a typical public school day. Then, their school work completed, kids have plenty of time for extracurriculars, hobbies, unstructured play and generally... fun.

Prisma Staff
• 
March 9, 2023

Prisma is the world’s most engaging virtual school that combines a fun, real-world curriculum with powerful mentorship from experienced coaches and a supportive peer community


The homeschool day can be quite efficient, compared to a typical public school day. When their school work is completed, kids have plenty of time for extracurriculars, hobbies, unstructured play and generally... fun.

But fun doesn’t have to be the thing you save for after hours — and it doesn’t mean turning into your child’s camp counselor. You can make homeschooling fun during the school day, with these three ingredients:

  1. A curriculum that prioritizes hands-on, interest-driven learning
  2. Rituals that give a healthy flow to your homeschool routine  
  3. Connection to others (peers, community members, your household, other homeschool families)

Here’s how:

Make learning fun

The concept of fun is so individual — and, at its best, so is homeschooling. So let your child lead the way. You’re not “giving in” — or giving them a less effective education — if that means incorporating topics, materials and approaches that don’t often appear in a traditional classroom: video games, podcasts, and pop music can all be a part of an impactful education, if they’re used to help develop the kinds of skills (like problem-solving, creativity and critical thinking) that set kids up for success.

At Prisma, learners get to roll up their sleeves and dig into whatever aspect of our broad theme is most enticing: they conduct delicious science experiments through baking, improve their rhetoric by writing video game reviews, and hone their entrepreneurial chops by designing their own apps. That’s what we call the “hard fun” of learning.

Our lesson plans incorporate elements of gamification, drawing on human instincts for competition and teamwork to make less conventionally fun activities downright enjoyable: in our Prisma High School life skills class, students earn points by completing missions, from doing the laundry to cooking their family a healthy meal.

If you’re open to trying this student-led approach, rather than follow a strict homeschool curriculum, we recommend you start from their interests, no matter how far they seem to take you from a traditional academic classroom: if they like board games, they can design their own out of Legos; if they love running around outdoors, they can create an outdoor scavenger hunt for the whole family.

This fun-first approach is especially important if you’re helping a child find their educational groove after a less-than-ideal experience in a traditional classroom (for example, gifted kid burnout). Start from a place of fun (which usually means confidence), and it’ll be easier to work towards that growth mindset than if you insist on the topic that makes them want to hide under their bed.


Incorporate fun rituals

It’s your day — and the way you tie together your homeschool schedule should be as intentional as the individual learning periods. Rituals and routines are crucial for maintaining a sense of structure in an otherwise free-form day. When you work, play and live all in the same space, you have to be extra intentional about marking the transitions between these activities.

But there’s no reason why these transitions have to be solemn: They can be as lighthearted as wearing a favorite hat during school hours, playing music between classes or having a dance party to mark the end of the day.

At Prisma, we find that the rituals developed by each of our small cohorts go a long way in making students excited to come to class. They may only last a moment but, repeated over time, these small fun things turn into strong connective tissue for the overall learning experience.

Fun ways to punctuate your homeschool day (or week):

  1. Kicking of your day of homeschool with a joke
  2. Taking a nature walk at the end of every week
  3. Playing a quick family card game at lunch
  4. Going on a Friday afternoon field trip planned by a different family member each week
  5. Incorporating exercise “snacks” every hour to stay active

Prisma

Find fun through connection

Learning is more fun in the company of a trusted community. One of the challenges of homeschooling can be finding, cultivating and maintaining that community — but it can be well worth the effort. We find that a direct by-product of having fun while learning is that it increases motivation.

Our Prisma cohorts are full of laughter and jokes, and that only enhances the quality of their work: When Prismarians collaborate on projects, give each other feedback, or look forward to presenting their work to their peers at Expo Day, they want to go above and beyond.

Here are a few ways to integrate community into your learning:

  1. Invite friends, neighbors and family to attend a presentation of your child’s work (online or in-person)
  2. Practice your foreign language skills by finding an online native-speaker buddy and have a conversation swap
  3. Design projects that involve local community groups, such as volunteer organizations
  4. Meet up with other homeschool parents locally or online to create study groups and share homeschool tips with one another
  5. Form a homeschool co-op or learn with a curated online cohort, like we offer at Prisma


Fun ideas for homeschool activities


Make a museum exhibit

Particularly well suited to science or social studies topics, museum exhibits are a great way to have students show off their mastery of a subject — while thinking about the way that knowledge should be presented to a visitor. Have them make models physically or using digital tools like TinkerCad, and print off or draw other visuals to support their exhibit. Then they can add explanatory labels to each object, write an introductory panel that explains the overall theme, and invite visitors to walk through and ask questions. Survey visitors on their takeaways from the visit, and use the feedback to refine the exhibit.

World-building

Science fiction and fantasy authors go through an intense world-building process to create the settings for their stories. While this is a natural fit for an English project, you can integrate that with social studies, for example, in our “Who Rules: 2050” theme, in which our high schoolers make a prediction about the future after studying current events and then build a setting for a story inspired by it. Or, for a science tie-in, study animal adaptations,  design a world different from ours, then create animals that could live in it, as we did in our “Uncharted Territories” theme.

Enter real competitions

There’s an extra layer of fun that comes from entering your work in a real competition with real prizes. In our “Games for Change” cycle, learners code games inspired by a topic they researched and enter them into the annual Games for Change competition. In the Wild Inventions theme, kids enter the Biomimicry Youth Design Challenge. You could plan your whole homeschool year around such competitions.

Here are quality sources of youth competitions to keep an eye on:

  1. The New York Times - ongoing competitions range from STEM topics, to personal essay prompts, responses to current events and video challenges
  2. Design for Change - a movement of change by and for children - hosts a yearly competition
  3. Harvard GSAS Journal of Emerging Investigators - an open access journal that publishes research from middle schoolers and high schoolers
  4. The Kennedy Center - competitions for budding visual artists and musicians
  5. Money Prodigy - this website keeps a running list of ongoing competitions for young entrepreneurs


The next generation deserves a better kind of school.

Learn more

More from our blog

What Are Microschools? 6 Pros and Cons for Parents

Microschools come in as many forms as public, private, and charter schools do. Here are some pros and cons to consider before enrolling in this alternative schooling model.

Emily Veno
• 
February 11, 2024

Best Online High Schools: Breakdown by Learning Style, Cost, and Reviews

So, traditional brick-and-mortar high school isn’t a good option, and you’re exploring alternatives. Here’s what to discuss as a family to narrow down the infinite options.

Emily Veno
• 
January 31, 2024

Is Homeschooling Better than Traditional Schooling? Reasons to Homeschool

When done well, homeschooling can deliver results traditional schooling rarely, if ever, does.

Emily Veno
• 
January 8, 2024

Project-Based Online School: How It Works

High-quality project-based learning mirrors the real-world process of creative problem-solving. Here's how we pull off this hands-on, collaborative form of schooling virtually.

Emily Veno
• 
December 14, 2023

8 Most Popular Online Homeschool Programs

We’re fans of online learning, but it depends how it’s done. Here’s some pros and cons of different kinds of online homeschooling resources to consider, plus links to a variety of options.

Emily Veno
• 
November 16, 2023

Homeschool Unit Study Examples & Free Planning Template

Unit studies blend multiple subjects together to create real-world, interest-driven learning experiences. Steal the approach our curriculum experts use to create themes with a free downloadable unit study planner.

Emily Veno
• 
November 6, 2023

Meet Camil Aponte

“The curriculum at Prisma allows learners to learn about their strengths and use their passions in an organic and interdisciplinary way. The kids have the freedom to choose by having differentiated projects, quests, enrichments, and clubs.”

Emily Veno
• 
October 21, 2023

How Do Homeschoolers Get Into College?

You might be hearing from friends, extended family, and random strangers in the doctor’s office “there’s no way your kid will be able to get into a good college as a homeschooler.” Impolite, yes. True? Let’s figure it out.

Emily Veno
• 
October 20, 2023

Meet Todd Forsyth

“The amount of support and check-ins our learners have at Prisma is unparalleled compared to anywhere else I’ve ever worked.”

Emily Veno
• 
October 16, 2023

Types of Homeschooling Explained: Which Style is Right for Your Family?

Each of the most popular homeschool styles has existed for a long time, and each has diehard evangelizers and fervent critics. From classical to unit studies to unschooling, this guide will help you find the form best suited to your family.

Emily Veno
• 
October 13, 2023