August in The Life Of Our Homeschooling Family
šæ A Busy August in the Life of our Homeschooling Family
Can you believe itās almost the end of summer? Well, not quiteāweāve still got a whole month to go! But August is definitely the busiest month in our homeschool calendar, packed full with summer camps, early wake-ups, planning the year ahead, and navigating those ever-changing sleep schedules. You know the drill!
If you’re just getting into homeschooling in Ireland, or are curious about how we manage during this time of year, here’s a peek behind the curtain š«.
š Finding the Best Summer Camps (and Booking Fast!)
Living in the Irish countryside has many perks, and one of them is affordable summer campsātypically ā¬70 for two kids for 4ā5 days, usually from 9am to 1pm. The trick? Finding them on time. Hereās how I do it:
- I search Facebook and Eventbrite using terms like āsummer camps near meā or follow local community groups where camps are posted.
- If thereās no booking link, I take a screenshot of the info and ring the number as soon as possible (Irish mamas, you know what Iām talking about!).
- Camps vary widelyāsports, nature, creative artsāso I try to balance what each child enjoys.
Then comes the prep! I make sure clean sports clothes are ready the night before (no early morning sock hunt, please š ) and pack healthy lunch bags with snacks, fruit, water, and the odd sweet treatāmore on that in an upcoming post!
š¤ Resetting Our Sleep Routine
With summer fun comes late bedtimes, but camps mean early starts, so we gently reset our routine:
- Bedtime by 8pm (no movies!)
- Wake-up around 7am with enough buffer for breakfast, brushing teeth, and getting out the door without stress
- And yesā¦there may be some pre-camp grumbling, but honestly, my kids love their camps and never complain once we’re there.
š¶ What About the Littlest One?
While the big two are off enjoying their mornings, Iāve got my 2-year-old Savannah with me. She adores her siblings and gets a bit emotional when we leave them behindācue some real toddler tears. š
But we make the most of our time together. Weāll hit a local coffee spot, browse a charity shop, or just have a quiet snack in the car. I also stay nearby during camp hoursājust in case thereās a call (Irish weather + flying footballs = anything can happen).
š Planning Our Homeschool Year
Nowās the time I start thinking about curriculum, books, and planning our yearānot rigid schedules, just gentle structure and exciting ideas.
So bear in mind that these are just a slight idea of what we do, we also use a lot of board games, lego, science experiment kit, building kits from amazon, smyths.ie and other places, what I am listing below is just the top of the iceberg, I’ll be adding so much more as we go š
Hereās what Iāve lined up:
š Language & Literacy:
- Spellbound 5 by CJ Fallon
- Creative Writer C – 5th Class (for my daughter)
- All Write Now Cursive Book ā 5th Class
ā Maths:
- Busy at Maths 5 (no workbook) ā Itās pricier, but super practical, and I love picking and choosing the lessons!
šÆ Extras:
We top things up with:
- Fun homework helper books from Mr Price (stickers, certificates = extra motivation!)
- Outschool.com online classes (coding, science, artāyou name it!)
- YouTube educational channels
- Library books (weāre big fans of borrowing instead of buying!)
- Cookbooks and hands-on life learning
𤹠Blending LearningāOur Homeschool Style
I donāt follow a strict curriculum. Instead, I blend. Because every child learns differently, and part of the joy of homeschooling is freedomāfreedom to learn through doing, exploring, and living.
Sure, we cover the core pillars: reading, writing, mathsābut we also learn through play, kitchen experiments, nature walks, and sibling debates over how many eggs are left in the fridge š.
š¬ So, Is Homeschooling for You?
When I think about the difference between what we do and what a traditional classroom offers, Iām reminded why we chose this path. Our kids get one-on-one time, space to be themselves, and a learning rhythm that flows with family life.
Most classrooms have 21+ kidsāsometimes even split classes. Meanwhile, weāre here building something flexible, personal, and yes, a bit wildābut wildly rewarding, too.
š Letās Chat!
- Are you prepping for a new homeschool year?
- What curriculum do you love (or avoid)?
- And how are you juggling August madness?
Leave a comment, share your plans, or even just ventābecause seriously, we deserve a gold medal for keeping it all together š
Give yourself a pat on the back, mama. What weāre doing might not always be easy, but itās real, itās intentional, and itās absolutely worth it š