Episode Details
Back to Episodes177: Factory Model Education: Why Homeschool Moms Feel Overwhelmed
Description
Ever feel like you're running a miniature public school in your living room? You're overwhelmed—not because you're doing too little, but because you're trying to do too much using the wrong model.
Most homeschool moms recreate the factory model education system they walked away from. They don’t mean to, but they do. This system teaches kids what to think, not how to think. It, also, turns them into followers, not leaders. But what if doing LESS actually produced stronger learners?
In this episode:
✅The 3-question filter to eliminate busy work and focus on what actually matters
✅ONE simple practice to start this week to stop overwhelm
✅75 reasons you’re totally overwhelmed, homeschool mom
✅How factory model education creates followers for the Industrial Revolution—not thinkers
✅Why depth beats breadth
✅How great leaders like Edison and Lincoln learned differently
Ready to break free from factory model education?
Grab the free 3-day video course "How to Simplify Your Homeschool" with daily emails, short videos, and printables to help you put it into practice!
Resources Mentioned:
Free Course: How to Simplify Your Homeschool
Course: Raising Leaders, Not Followers (17 tips on encouraging a love of learning)
Show Notes:
Have you ever looked at your homeschool plan and felt like you were running a miniature public school in your living room? Many homeschool moms feel overwhelmed — not because they're doing too little, but because they are trying to do too much and follow the wrong model.
The real issue is that, unintentionally, we recreate the system we walked away from. Think about it: three kids, times five lessons a day, times five days a week — that's 75 lesson plans a week. No wonder you're overwhelmed.
Most homeschool moms were trained on the factory school model of education. They all come in to first grade, they do all the same things, and they go down the factory line all the way to 12th grade. Everything the same. Tested the same. It's like a factory.
This model teaches us that learning must include multiple-choice tests, many subjects a day, and textbooks for everything. We've only had textbooks in the last hundred years — before that, they used real books. This model teaches us that worksheets, grading, and constant assessm