2nd/3rd Grade Homeschool Curriculum Plan for Orthodox Christian Family
- stirenepress
- 1 day ago
- 5 min read
It is the end of May 2025 and we are starting to wind down school and get ready for summer. While we do some "summer school" at my house, we definitely take a break from school and prioritize fun activities and taking care our our small homestead during the summer months.
In mid-August, it will be back to school! My oldest son will probably have another year at a small local charter school for his 8th grade year (before he attends a hybrid school for homeschoolers for high school.)
My youngest son (turning 8 in late summer) will be in 2nd/3rd this upcoming year. His birthday is right near the cut off, so for some subjects I have him in 2nd and in others I have him in 3rd grade. In addition to homeschooling, during the year he will be in participating in a ninja warrior class, taking Suzuki violin, and attending a hybrid school for homeschoolers that provides two 5-hour days a week of homeschooling enrichment. (Specifically, literature unit studies that cover geography, history, writing, science, logic/critical thinking, etc.)
I'm excited about this addition to our homeschool life, but it will also be a huge change! The hybrid school won't actually change our homeschooling content at home too much, and it won't have any homework.
So in case anyone likes learning about curriculum plans as much as I do, I will share ours below! Doing this each year also helps me get organized and see if there is anything I forgot about!
So here is what we plan to use for my son's 2nd/3rd grade year -
Grammar and Writing: Bob Jones English 3
We are going to continue with Bob Jones English for one more year. I really like that the program includes all of the writing and grammar needed in one book. I felt that a few of the writing lessons in English 2 were a little confusing and needed some modification in how they were presented, so if that happens in English 3, I will probably switch to Rod and Staff English the following year. Overall though, it worked great. Since I didn't use the teacher's manual much, I ordered the curriculum from the Christian Liberty Press website without the teacher's manual and just a homeschool guide instead.
Spelling: Building Spelling Skills 2 and Spelling by Dictation
I like switching between traditional spelling curriculum and dictation. Building Spelling Skills is an inexpensive phonics and spelling rules based curriculum that also has exercises that aid in critical thinking and learning vocabulary as well. I also like mixing in dictation sometimes.
Math: Christian Light Education Math 3, supplemented with Singapore Dimension Math 3
We will continue with the traditional program Christian Light Education. It is a spiral program that builds at a good pace and leads to solid arithmetic skills. I am planning to supplement with Singapore Dimensions Math so my son can also have some exposure to that style in case he needs it later.
Reading: Christian Light Education Reading 3
We read novels and living books together, but I still like to use CLE Reading as a formal reading comprehension program. Many of the stories contain moral lessons related to a Bible verse, or historical fiction regarding America history. The guided discussion questions also help my son and I connect, and helps him practice speaking. Sometimes I skip the questions if he does a really thorough job summarizing the story on this own.
History Stories for Children by Christian Liberty Press, history read-alouds
Instead of a full history curriculum next year, I am going to spend a year on general history stories, read alouds from my shelf, and geography workbooks. The central book will be History Stories for Children by Christian Liberty Press. (The following year, we will do Our Star Spangled Banner by Notgrass, followed by A Child's History of the World in 4th grade.)


Science: Exploring God's Creation 3 and Christian Liberty Nature Reader 3
I am excited to use Exploring God's Creation by Christian Liberty Press for the first time. My son really loves science and this includes some simple science experiments that I don't think will be too hard to do at home. If we finish early enough, we will start Book 3 in the CLP Nature Reader series.

Art Study: Come Look with Me, Exploring Art with Children
Come Look with Me is a great series I started using this year. Each layout contains the art piece, guided questions, and a short biography of the artist and sometimes some trivia about the painting. We do this about once a week together. (Just a heads up, every now and then the book series includes some art that might be too abstract/modern for our tastes, but that has led to some good discussions.)

Handwriting: Pentime 2 and Pentime 3

Critical Thinking: Building Thinking Skills
Every now and then, I have my son do some pages in Building Thinking Skills

Foreign Language: Prima Latina by Memoria Press
This past year, my son used Song School Spanish 1 but would not listen to the songs on the CD because they were "too silly." I told him that if we did Song School Spanish 2, it would be harder and he would have to listen to the songs. So, he decided to start Latin instead! I told him that Prima Latina includes serious prayers instead of silly songs and that seems to be more his style. We'll see!
Orthodox Morning Time: We are going to use the Orthodox Christian Morning Time Curriculum all summer as a family. My dilemma is that my youngest son can handle hearing the Lives of the Saints by St. Dimitry of Rostov read aloud when his older brother is with him, but I'm uncertain if he is ready on his own. I am certain he will be ready at age 9 though, so instead of going through the curriculum with shorter lives written for younger children this year, I am going to wait until he is 9, which is also when his older brother may be "homeschooled" again to do it with him. I may put something else together to use with him next year. He is also very much in the stage of mastering the content of Old Testament Bible stories, miracles and parables and I think he needs another year of this. My oldest son that has hyperlexia would have been more than ready at age 6, but my youngest is on a different time table with this.
Arts/Craft Instruction: This I still need to figure out...TBD
Well that's it! It seems like a lot when it's all written out, but some subjects get done very fast.
Happy homeschooling!
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