Easy Multi-Subject Homeschool Lesson Plans
By Melanie Marten, published Feb 03, 2007
Published Content: 907 Total Views: 1,444,374 Favorited By: 160 CPs
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Creating a lesson plan for your homeschool curriculum is easy to do if you know how. On the other hand, it can seem very overwhelming to come up with a way to teach all subjects by covering just one topic. This easy plan will show you how you can create your very own multi-subject homeschool lesson plan. Reading
A simple trip to the library will find you many books for your homeschool student to read for a particular lesson plan. Not only can you find age-appropriate non-fiction books, you can often find stories, poems, and song lyrics that he or she can read as well. Reading aloud and to his or herself is a great way to practice. Afterward, a discussion or quiz to test comprehension is a good idea.
Writing
Writing in a homeschool lesson plan can take many forms. Handwriting skills can be practiced with copy-work. Creative writing can take the form of stories, poems, reports, and journals. A history themed lesson lends itself to writing a dairy or letters from a historical person. For a science theme, your homeschool student can write a concise report of lab work or findings.
Social Studies or History
A topic of study is usually based around a social studies of history subject. Creating a time line of the events in question is a great way to understand how things took place. If you are focusing on a science topic instead, you can study historical advancements that came before the current subject, or what the historical viewpoint of such subject was.
Mathematics
It is easy to add a math lesson to any subject study. You can simply write word problems using subject related themes for the type of math your student is currently doing. For example, if your lesson plan is about colonial America, and your student is learning subtraction, you can write problems about John plowing acres, or Mary shucking corn.
Science
The heading of science encompasses many subjects. If the topic lends itself to this, you can find scientific experiments or projects to complete in your home. Even if it a historical lesson, it will be interesting to learn about food procurement, current technology levels, or new discoveries that could have had an impact.

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Takeaways
- A simple trip to the library will find you many books for your homeschool student to read for a particular lesson plan.
- Handwriting skills can be practiced with copy-work.
- You can incorporate music easily into any history themed lesson plan.
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Posted on 10/24/2007 at 7:10:00 AM