by Kayley Kenzie

Homeschooling your child using theme-based learning is a fun way to teach and learn. You can involve your child as you brainstorm a them from virtually any topic your child shows an interest in.

Young children might prefer themes around things like apples, the zoo, birds, stars, or a favorite author. Whenever you tailor your homeschool lesson plans around a theme, learning becomes a lot more fun and creative.

When basing your homeschool lesson plans around a thematic unit, you will want to decide how much time you will need to cover that specific theme.

It depends largely on how much your child wants to learn the theme, how deeply he or she wants to explore it. You could spend anywhere from a week to a month on particular theme. I suggest spending just two weeks on a theme.

It’s not difficult to integrate themes into homeschool lesson plans. You’ll also come to realize just how much fun you and your child are having by learning so much through a particular theme.

You don’t necessarily need to integrate every single subject into the thematic unit. You don’t even need to do theme-based learning all of the time with your homeschool lesson plans.

Getting your child involved in the planning process is another important idea to keep in mind. Encourage your child to choose some lesson themes.

You’ll enhance your children’s interest in the lessons when you involve them and give them choices. I think it’s very important to get your child involved as much as possible in all aspects of lesson planning and preparation.

Let’s have a look at an example to see exactly how you would use themes in your homeschooling lesson plans. Let’s say you chose apples for your thematic unit. That being the case, you might have a science lesson on how apples grow.

When we do math, we could work on fractions by dividing apples into slices. Learning about Johnny Appleseed could be a lesson for Social Studies. We could study books about apples. For Language Arts, we could write a paragraph about apples.

It gets even more fun: We can take those apple slices from the math lesson and transform them into stamps for the art lesson. We could sing songs that have apples in the lyrics. We could conclude it all with a cooking lesson, teaching your child how to make applesauce or apple bread.

The important thing to remember when you’re putting together theme-based homeschool lesson plans is to use your child’s interests. You’ll make learning even more enjoyable when you use thematic units to enhance the curriculum you already have planned.

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