What Do You Actually Believe About Your Homeschool?
The Homeschool Philosophy Workbook helps you figure it out — before you open a single curriculum catalog.
Before you can choose the right curriculum, you need to know what you are looking for. Before you can evaluate an approach to learning, you need to understand what you actually believe about how your child learns. The Homeschool Philosophy Workbook gives you the foundation that makes every other homeschool decision easier.
Five reflection sections. Honest questions. Space to write it all down. Free.
Does any of this sound familiar?
You searched homeschool curriculum options and closed all the tabs without downloading anything —
because you had no idea how to evaluate what you were even looking at.
You have a sense of what you value in education,
but when someone asks about your approach you cannot quite put it into words.
You keep second-guessing your choices
because you are not sure whether they line up with what you actually believe — or just what worked for someone else.
You want a homeschool that feels intentional and coherent.
You just are not sure where to start.
If any of that resonated, you are not missing something. You just have not had the chance to stop and clarify the foundation that makes everything else make sense.
That is exactly what this workbook is for.

What’s Inside the Home Philosophy Workbook
The Homeschool Philosophy Workbook walks you through five areas of your homeschool life — the ones that quietly shape every decision you make. For each section there is a short introduction and a few honest questions to sit with. At the end, you will have a written homeschool philosophy you can return to any time you are evaluating a curriculum, navigating a hard season, or wondering if what you are doing is actually working.
This is not a lesson plan template or a curriculum comparison guide. It is something that goes underneath all of that — the why that makes the what finally make sense.
What’s Inside?
Foundation & Faith
What do you believe education is ultimately for? What convictions — about God, about children, about learning — sit underneath your homeschool and give it direction?
Your Approach to Learning
What do you believe about how children learn best? What structure, method, or combination of approaches actually fits your family — and how does it need to work for you as the parent, not just for your child?
Your View of the Child
What do you believe about the child sitting across from you at the table every morning? Are you focused on personhood or performance? How does your answer show up in the way you respond to hard days?
Environment & Culture
What kind of atmosphere do you want your homeschool to have? Does your physical space and daily emotional climate actually reflect what you say you value?
Your Measure of Success
If homeschool success is never defined, it defaults to comparison. What does success actually mean for your family — and how will you know when you are moving in the right direction, even on hard days?
Each section ends with space to write your most honest answer. The final section walks you through pulling everything together into a short written statement — a few sentences that capture what you believe and what you are building in your homeschool. Clear enough to return to when you are evaluating a curriculum. Steady enough to hold onto when a hard week makes you question everything.
This Is For You If…
Hi, I’m Nicole
I am a stay-at-home mom who homeschools my girls, loves a cozy and intentional home, and believes the most important things that happen in our families rarely make the highlight reel. I write about homeschooling, homemaking, and intentional parenting at nicoleanson.com.
When I first started researching homeschool curriculum, I opened tab after tab and closed them all without downloading anything. Not because the options were bad, but because I had no idea how to evaluate them. I did not have a foundation yet. I did not know what I was actually looking for.
So one evening I sat down and started writing out what I believed — about education, about my daughter, about what I wanted our school days to feel like and what I was ultimately building toward. That list became the beginning of our homeschool philosophy. And once it was written down, every curriculum decision got easier.
This workbook is the guided version of that process. I hope it does for you what it did for me.

You already know more than you think.
You have convictions about education. You have a sense of what you want your homeschool to feel like, what you want your children to carry with them, what you are building here. You just may not have stopped long enough to write it down.
That is what this workbook is. Thirty minutes and a quiet corner. A few honest questions. A written philosophy you can return to whenever you are making a curriculum decision, navigating a hard season, or wondering whether what you are doing is actually working.
It’s free. It’s yours. Let’s start.