Homeschooling cannot be shown step-by-step. There is no way to give precise instructions. To rephrase a message from Seth Godin in his book Linchpin about other creative endeavors, “The reason that [homeschooling] is valuable is precisely why I can’t tell you how to do it. If there were a map, there’d be no need to wrestle with the task of [homeschooling]. If we were following prescribed steps, we wouldn’t be navigating; we wouldn’t be finding our own way.”
Homeschooling is creative and flexible and unscripted.
“Showing them step by step precisely how to be a [homeschooler] is impossible,” again, rephrasing Seth Godin.
There is no map, Godin teaches.
“I love that there’s no map,” he says delightedly.
Like Godin, I also have great pleasure in my own unscripted methods.
Imitation is an unpleasant way to live.
We don’t need a carbon copy of any particular family’s homeschool.