[Podcast #348] Kids Don’t Learn the Way You Think They Do
What if educational rigor isn’t about children sitting still, pushing through tedium, and finishing every worksheet without complaint?
In this Brave Writer podcast episode, we reimagine rigor as a meaningful challenge: the kind children willingly embrace when the goal matters to them. From math games and secret codes to bird lists, comics, Pokémon tea time, and writing that reaches an interested audience, we explore how hard work becomes inviting when it is rooted in:
- play,
- connection,
- and curiosity.
We share practical ways to build reading, writing, handwriting, spelling, math, and science skills without draining the joy from learning.
Join us as we rethink what rigorous learning can look like at home.
Show Notes
Rigor That Feels Like Play
What do we mean when we say we want a “rigorous” education for our children?
Too often, rigor gets mistaken for stamina in the face of tedium. A child sits still. A child finishes the page. A child copies the sentence, corrects the punctuation, completes the math problems, and does it all without complaint. We breathe a sigh of relief. Surely learning happened.
But children show us another version of rigor all the time.
Watch a child learn to skateboard. Watch them try a video game level again and again. Watch them build a dam in the gutter, invent a secret code, memorize Pokémon stats, or spend an hour trying to make the perfect paper airplane. Children are not afraid of hard work. They are afraid of hard work that seems pointless.
That distinction matters.
The question is not, “How do we make our children do difficult things?” The better question is, “What makes the difficulty worth it?”
A child learning to read may not care about fluency as an abstract future goal. But they may care very much about reading a comic strip, decoding a Pokémon card, finding out what the sign says, or reading a note left on their bedroom door. A child who resists handwriting may suddenly painstakingly write bird names in a field journal because those birds “count” only if they write them down. A child who groans over copywork might happily label the whole house in a fantasy language or secret code.
That is rigor. Not because it looks impressive on paper, but because the child is investing effort, attention, and persistence in a meaningful challenge.
Find the Living Context
Our work as home educators is to identify the skill, then find the living context where that skill matters. Reading, writing, spelling, math, observation, memory, narration, revision, and critical thinking do not have to live inside isolated worksheets. They can live inside board games, read-alouds, homemade mailboxes, whiteboard jokes, audiobooks, captions, nature journals, family games, poetry teatime, and the elaborate worlds our children are already building.
This does not mean we abandon skill-building. It means we stop confusing correction with growth. A child who misspells a word, stumbles over a line, or writes a thin sentence is not failing. They are still falling off the beam. Our job is not to stand at the bottom with a red pen. Our job is to stay close enough to say, “You got me interested. I want to hear more.”
Feedback is most useful when the child can do something with it right away. Connection keeps the learning alive.
We do not need to explain the academic value of every playful moment. Children do not need to hear, “This is one-to-one correspondence” while moving a game piece across a board. They do not need a lecture on geology before smashing sequins into clay to see how pressure changes what is hidden inside. We can notice the learning quietly. We can write it down later.
The brave learner is not only the child. It is us.
We are learning to observe. To adapt. To enter the play. To make the next challenge just interesting enough that the child reaches for it.
That is the kind of rigor that lasts.
Resources
- Learn a new language with Talkbox! Try it out at talkbox.MOM/brave
- Join us for our free Brave Writer Summer Camp on July 22nd and 23rd!
- Find our favorite readalouds and nonfiction in the Brave Writer Book Shop
- Registration begins July 20 for Gamers Write! Minecraft Edition, Becoming a Critical Thinker, and other awesome Brave Writer classes!
- Visit Julie’s Substack to find her special podcast for kids (and a lot more!)
- Purchase Julie’s new book, Help! My Kid Hates Writing
- Find community at the Brave Learner Home
- Learn more about the Brave Writer Literature & Mechanics programs
- Start a free trial of CTCmath.com to try the math program that’s sure to grab and keep your child’s attention
- Subscribe to Julie’s Substack newsletters, Brave Learning with Julie Bogart and Julie Off Topic, and Melissa’s Catalog of Enthusiasms
- Sign up for our Text Message Pod Ring to get podcast updates and more!
- Send us podcast topic ideas by texting us: +1 (833) 947-3684
- Interested in advertising with us? Reach out to media@bravewriter.com
Connect with Julie
- Instagram: @juliebogartwriter
- Threads: @juliebogartwriter
- Bluesky: @bravewriter.com
- Facebook: facebook.com/bravewriter
Connect with Melissa
- Website: melissawiley.com
- Substack: melissawiley.substack.com
- Instagram: @melissawileybooks
- Bluesky: @melissawiley.bsky.social
Produced by NOVA
A Semester’s Worth of Online Writing Classes
You are a conscientious home educator. You want to make sure you have everything possible planned.
But between…
- math programs,
- art classes,
- sports schedules,
- science experiments,
- co-op days
- history curriculum,
- reading lists,
- and more,
…planning a new homeschool year can be overwhelming.
Let Brave Writer help!
We’ve been teaching writing online for 26 years, and our writing coaches are professional published authors and homeschoolers. So let us plan an entire semester of writing classes for you, including high school offerings!
Brave Writer’s crafted cohorts cover all the bases for a year of rich langauge arts—including the breaks your child or teens need to pause and practice what they’ve learned. The best way to consolidate skills and make them stick!
Just follow these simple steps:
- Choose a level: Elementary, Middle, or High School
- Preview your cohort options—you’ll be ready when registration opens
Then sit back and enjoy!
[Podcast #347] Part Two: ADHD and Homeschooling
Have you ever wondered whether your scattered systems, duplicate scissors, or frozen to-do list are actually character flaws, or clues to how your brain works?
In this second conversation about ADHD in the homeschooling parent (here’s Part One), we look at the inattentive traits that can hide behind daydreaming, over-planning, lost objects, and task paralysis. We talk about accommodations, body doubling, medication, the ADHD tax, and why evaluations can miss neurodivergent homeschooled kids whose lives are already beautifully adapted to their needs.
Most of all, we name the relief that comes when shame gives way to information. Tune in and let’s make room for every brain in the homeschool.
Show Notes
When Your Brain Has Its Own Homeschool Rhythm
Have you ever stood in the middle of your kitchen, surrounded by half-finished tasks, and wondered why everything feels harder than it should?
The laundry is waiting. The math book is open. Someone needs lunch. There is an email you meant to answer three days ago. You know what to do, at least in theory. Yet starting the next thing feels impossible.
For many homeschooling parents with ADHD or ADHD-like traits, this experience can become tangled with shame. We tell ourselves we are lazy, scattered, inconsistent, too much, not enough. We mistake brain wiring for moral failure.
But information changes everything.
When we understand the brain’s needs, we can stop asking, “What is wrong with me?” and begin asking, “What support would help this brain function better?”
That shift matters.
Some of us have been accommodating ourselves for years without knowing it. We keep multiple calendars. We buy scissors for every room because the one pair always disappears. We write better at the library because other people are quietly working. We invite a child to sit nearby while we tackle a project because another body in the room helps us stay present.
Those are not failures. They are strategies.
Accommodations are everywhere. Glasses help eyes focus. Hearing aids help ears receive sound. Quiet testing rooms help certain brains think. Body doubling, visual reminders, duplicate tools, timers, medication, therapy, and external accountability can all be ways of meeting a brain with what it needs.
Homeschooling can be beautifully forgiving for neurodivergent families because home education is flexible by nature. We can let the child move. We can follow interests. We can pause for snacks, read on the couch, or turn a hard day into a poetry teatime with store-bought cookies on a napkin.
That flexibility is a gift.
It can also hide needs.
A child who would struggle in a classroom may thrive at home because we have already adapted the environment. A child who never has homework cannot forget to turn it in. A child who keeps all the books in the house cannot forget to bring them home from school. A child who hyperfocuses on a beloved activity may not look “distractible” at all.
This is why curiosity matters.
Not panic. Not labels as verdicts. Curiosity.
We can pay attention to the child who cannot play alone unless a costume unlocks the imagination. We can notice the child who invites a friend over and then plays beside them rather than with them. We can check vision, hearing, speech, attention, sensory needs, and development. We can seek evaluations when our instincts tug at us.
A diagnosis does not reduce a child to a problem. It can give us a map.
The same is true for parents. Your limits are not an interruption to the homeschool. They are part of the homeschool. Every parent brings strengths and constraints. Some of us bring magic to language, conversation, and ideas. Some of us bring beauty to logistics, presentation, and order. Most of us bring a mix.
The goal is not to become a different person. The goal is to build a life where the real people in the room can learn, love, and grow with less shame.
Information helps with strategy. And strategy helps peace return.
Resources
- DIVA questionnaire for ADHD: Advancedassessments.co.uk
- Sign up for our free Brave Writer Summer Camp!
- Check out the special offer at Talkbox.MOM/brave and start speaking a new language with your kids from day one!
- Find our favorite readalouds and nonfiction in the Brave Writer Book Shop
- Brave Writer class registration is open!
- Visit Julie’s Substack to find her special podcast for kids (and a lot more!)
- Purchase Julie’s new book, Help! My Kid Hates Writing
- Find community at the Brave Learner Home
- Learn more about the Brave Writer Literature & Mechanics programs
- Start a free trial of CTCmath.com to try the math program that’s sure to grab and keep your child’s attention
- Subscribe to Julie’s Substack newsletters, Brave Learning with Julie Bogart and Julie Off Topic, and Melissa’s Catalog of Enthusiasms
- Sign up for our Text Message Pod Ring to get podcast updates and more!
- Send us podcast topic ideas by texting us: +1 (833) 947-3684
- Interested in advertising with us? Reach out to media@bravewriter.com
Connect with Julie
- Instagram: @juliebogartwriter
- Threads: @juliebogartwriter
- Bluesky: @bravewriter.com
- Facebook: facebook.com/bravewriter
Connect with Melissa
- Website: melissawiley.com
- Substack: melissawiley.substack.com
- Instagram: @melissawileybooks
- Bluesky: @melissawiley.bsky.social
Produced by NOVA



















