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About Us

A Cottage Education exists to bring peace, simplicity, and joy back into homeschooling.

In a world of noise, overwhelm, and endless curriculum choices, this space offers quiet clarity and gentle guidance.

Here, we focus on:
🌿 Nature-based learning
📖 Faith-friendly resources
🎒 Early childhood foundations
🌤 Calm daily rhythms
🎨 Creative, hands-on activities
📚 Beautiful books and simple unit studies

Everything you find here is created to help you build a homeschool life that feels restful, intentional, and deeply connected.

This is a cozy corner of the internet for families who believe that childhood is sacred, learning should be joyful, and home is the best place to grow curious minds.

Welcome to our cottage. 🌼

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Beginner’s Guide to Homeschooling

How to Start With Confidence When You’re Teaching Kids of All Ages When I first began homeschooling, I imagined peaceful mornings, a tidy table, and children who eagerly opened their books. What I   got   instead was a 2-year-old pulling pencils off the table, a newborn who needed to nurse exactly when we started math, and a teenager asking if she   really   needed to write an essay that day. And yet… somehow, beautifully, homeschooling worked. It still works — even now that I’m teaching a 17-year-old finishing high school requirements, an outspoken 13-year-old, a hands-on very energetic 5-year-old, and entertaining a toddler while wearing a newborn in a sling. If you’re new to homeschooling, I want you to know: ✨  It doesn’t have to be perfect to be powerful. ✨  You already have everything you need to start. ✨  A gentle, home-centered education grows naturally over time. Here’s the simple beginner’s roadmap I wish I had on day one. 1. Know Your “Why” ...

How to Track Your Child’s Progress in Homeschooling

Gentle, Low-Stress Methods That Work for Multiple Ages When you’re homeschooling a high schooler, a middle schooler, a little one learning letters, a toddler determined to climb everything, and a newborn who dictates the pace of your day — you need a tracking system that’s simple and realistic. I’ve tried strict planners, detailed spreadsheets, and fancy apps. None of them lasted. What  did  last were gentle, flexible methods that fit into real life — the kind of life where you’re reading to the 5-year-old while bouncing a newborn, and your teenager is asking about FAFSA forms. Here’s how I track progress across all ages without stress: 1. Keep a Simple Weekly Log (Not a Complicated Planner) Once a week, I jot down: What we read Pages completed Concepts mastered Activities we enjoyed Any challenges It takes 5 minutes and paints a clear picture over time. 2. Use “Snapshots” Instead of Daily Grading For my 17- and 13-year-olds, I take monthly snapshots: a writing sample a math q...

How to Homeschool Multiple Kids Without Feeling Overwhelmed

Simple Systems That Work When You’re Teaching Teens Through Toddlers Some days, homeschooling multiple ages feels like spinning plates while someone hands you a baby. Literally. With a 17-year-old preparing for adulthood, a 13-year-old deep in middle school work, a curious 5-year-old who wants to “do school like the big kids,” a toddler who loves crayons a little  too  much, and a newborn who decides the worst possible times to nap… I’ve learned something important: Homeschooling multiple kids works beautifully when you stop trying to school each child separately. Here’s what works in our cottage-style homeschool: 1. Start the Day TOGETHER (Morning Basket Saves Everything) You can unify  any  age group with a simple morning basket: Read-aloud Scripture or poetry A simple nature topic A picture book A short discussion Your teen may pretend not to love it— but they listen. And it anchors the day. 2. Teach “Family Style” Subjects Together To save your sanity, combine: S...