Deschooling: What, Why, and How?

June 16, 2022 Treehouse Schoolhouse

As children adjust from a classroom environment to home education, parents should consider taking time to deschool and discover how their child learns best, what excites and stresses them, and how to best fit home education into their lives and schedule. Gathering this information through a slow and relaxed period of time helps parents decide how to move forward with homeschooling. Deschooling will help children learn more easily and peacefully discover what homeschooling styles they resonate with, what curriculum to choose, and what kind of daily rhythm will work best.

In this blog post, I am sharing all about deschooling and how to practice this in your homeschool.

In this blog post:

  • What is deschooling?
  • Why should you practice deschooling?
  • How to practice deschooling

What is deschooling?

nature play ideas for kids

Deschooling is an intentional time period that helps parents and children make the transition from traditional schooling to homeschooling. To really get the benefits of homeschooling, parents and children need to disconnect from the methods of traditional schooling they are used to and adapt to their new environment of home education.

Deschooling looks like taking a step back from formal education for a season and instead, focus on connection and setting the atmosphere for your new lifestyle of home education. This takes intention on the parent’s part; the longer a child has been in school, the more important it is for everyone to allow generous time to process the huge change.

Why should you practice deschooling?

nature play ideas for kids

The main idea of deschooling is to retrain the parent and child’s mind about what education is and the best ways to implement it. Because traditional classroom education is focused on teaching many students at once, it is set up entirely differently than a home education environment. During the process of deschooling, parents and children can “unlearn” how school has always been and grow into a new way that is better suited for home education. 

Homeschooling shifts the focus from classroom management of a large group of students to helping a child reach his or her specific learning goals. A period of deschooling prior to jumping right into homeschooling helps both students and parents make this shift.

During deschooling, parents have the time and space to gain an understanding of how their child learns best and what makes a valuable and effective education. Another hope is that during the process of deschooling, children will be free from the pressures of tests and standards and restore their natural love of learning in a safe and connected environment.

How to practice deschooling 

preschool schedule daily rhythm quiz

The amount of time you should spend deschooling is unique to each family and child. The longer the child was in formal classroom education, the longer the process will be. You may not know how long you and your child will need – days, weeks, or months – until you begin. Try to resist the urge to plan it all out and trust the process. Rather than going from zero formal education at home to all, I recommend transitioning in slowly when it is time, maybe including one or two subjects a day and then increasing from there. In the meantime, here are some things to be doing during the deschooling process.

Establish gentle structure in your days

During the deschooling transition period, I recommend keeping some structure by creating a gentle daily rhythm. To see some examples of daily rhythms we have had in the past as a homeschool family, click here. Rather than scheduling formal lessons into your days, try having intentional time for avenues of connection such as exploring nature, playing games, or cooking together.

Keep your child in the loop and dream together

Talk to your child about the differences between classroom and home learning and what the period of deschooling will look like. Depending on your child’s age and interest, allow them some freedom on what they want to learn in their new life as a homeschooler. Make a homeschooling bucket list of places to go and things to learn. Dream together about what home education will look like.

Set aside formal academics.

Take a breath and put aside all school-like lessons for a season. Use this time to focus on connection, discovery, fun, and play. Visit the zoo, museums, historic sites, and galleries. Let your child help pick where to go. Pay attention to what interests your child and dive deeper into those interests in a natural way. Visit parks and other natural areas together. Invest in things that will excite your child in being and discovering the outdoors, such as a camera, binoculars, field guides, or a journal.

Take this time to educate yourself.

Spend time diving into books, blogs, and podcasts to learn what you believe about education. Here are some of my top favorites. Invest time in learning about your child’s learning style as well. This blog post will guide you in all the steps to take as a new homeschooling family.

Find your homeschool community.

Seek out a homeschool community on Facebook or through Wild + Free. Search for homeschool co-ops or nature groups. You may need to visit several groups before you find people that you click with.

Get creative.

Stocked up with craft supplies and encourage your child to get creative. Watch drawing tutorials or take a local sewing or art class. Ask your child what they want to learn how to do or make and go after that together. Inspire the desire to dream and do!

Let your child select books and audiobooks that interest them. If reading isn’t something your child loves, try pairing a book with its coordinating movie. Read the book together and celebrate it at the end by doing a related cooking project, craft, and watching the movie. Try reading aloud while your child is playing with something in their hands like legos or playdough. Help your child discover that reading is fun and relaxing, not only an assignment.

Favorite homeschool resources from Treehouse Schoolhouse

Daily Rhythm Bundle

preschool schedule daily rhythm quiz

Children are highly visual–they can feel particularly out of control when they don’t know what to expect of their day. That’s why we recommend using a visual schedule to support your children from the time they are very young.

Rather than trying to stick to a rigid schedule, the Daily Rhythm Bundle helps you create a general rhythm for your days. The daily rhythm worksheet is laminated and dry erase and the cards can be moved around offering you flexibility and adaptability. 

Treehouse Nature Study

Owl Pellet Dissection Activity

Treehouse Nature Study, Primary Years is a seasonal nature study curriculum designed with family-style learning in mind. It is a gentle guide meant to invite various ages to connect with each other and the world around them through living books, nature notebooking, hands-on projects, and beauty subjects such as poetry, picture study, and folk songs. 

From preschool through upper middle school, it appeals to every age and is easily used with multiple ages at the same time. 

Treehouse Book Studies

Treehouse Book Studies

Treehouse Book Studies are digital download book studies of children’s literature for ages 5-13. Use in your homeschool as literature curriculum or as book study with a small group. Create lasting connections through rich stories while you study themes such as science, nature, geography, history, and language arts. Each download includes: Book Study with weekly lesson plans, recipes, Book Report Template, Extension Book List, Multimedia Reference Materials links, and Book Club Meet-up Guide.

Did you practice deschooling in your family? Share your experience in the comments below.

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