There's no one right way to schedule a homeschool day. The schedule that works for a family with one 6-year-old looks nothing like the schedule for a family with three kids ages 7, 10, and 14.
Here are 6 templates I've seen work. Steal whichever one fits your life.
Template 1: The Morning Block (Our Schedule)
Best for: Families who want academics done before lunch.
8:00-8:45 Math. 8:45-9:00 Break. 9:00-9:45 Language Arts. 9:45-10:15 Read-aloud. 10:15-10:30 Break. 10:30-11:15 Science or History (alternating days). Done by 11:30. Afternoons: free play, activities, co-op, or projects.
Total academics: ~3 hours. This works because young kids (under 12) have their best focus in the morning. By afternoon, they need to move and play.
Template 2: The Loop Schedule
Best for: Families who hate rigid daily schedules.
Instead of assigning subjects to days, create a loop: Math, Reading, Science, Writing, History, Art. Work through the loop in order, doing one subject per time block. When you stop for the day, pick up where you left off tomorrow. Some days you cover 3 subjects. Some days 2. The loop ensures everything gets covered without the pressure of a fixed schedule.
Template 3: The Block Schedule
Best for: Families with multiple children at different levels.
Mornings: one-on-one instruction (rotate through kids in 30-minute blocks). While one child works with you, others do independent work or Khan Academy. Afternoons: group subjects (science experiments, history read-alouds, art) where everyone participates at their level.
Template 4: The 4-Day Week
Best for: Families who want a flex day for field trips, appointments, and catch-up.
Monday-Thursday: full academic schedule (slightly longer days). Friday: field trips, co-op, special projects, or catch-up from anything missed. This gives you built-in buffer every week.
Template 5: The Year-Round Schedule
Best for: Families who want shorter days and no summer slide.
6 weeks on, 1 week off, year-round. Shorter daily schedule (2-2.5 hours). No long summer break. Frequent breaks prevent burnout. Kids retain more because there's no 3-month gap.
Template 6: The Unschool Flow
Best for: Families following child-led learning.
No fixed schedule. Mornings: whatever the child is interested in, with materials available. Afternoons: activities, nature, play. Parent documents learning as it happens. Structure comes from routine (breakfast, learning time, lunch, outdoor time, dinner) not from a subject schedule.
Try one for two weeks. If it doesn't fit, try another. Most families cycle through 2-3 templates before finding their rhythm. That's normal.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does a typical homeschool schedule look like?
Most families do 3-4 hours of structured learning in the morning (math, reading, writing), followed by afternoon enrichment activities (science, art, music, PE). The exact schedule varies by family and age.
Should I follow a block schedule or traditional schedule?
Block schedules (focusing on 1-2 subjects per day) work well for older students who need deep focus. Traditional schedules (multiple short subjects daily) suit younger students who benefit from variety.
How do I create a homeschool schedule that works?
Start with your non-negotiables (meals, activities, work schedule), then fit in core subjects during your child's peak focus time. Build in breaks and flexibility. Adjust after 2 weeks based on what is working.