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The Habits Every Homeschool Family Needs with Leigh Bortins

The Habits Every Homeschool Family Needs with Leigh Bortins

Season 10 Episode 85 Published 1 week ago
Description

What if the most important thing you teach your child has nothing to do with curriculum? In this episode of the Everyday Educator podcast, host Emma Bortins sits down with her mother-in-law and Classical Conversations founder Leigh Bortins to discuss the ideas behind her new book, The Habits: Practicing the Art of Grammar. Together they explore how naming, attending, memorizing, expressing, and storytelling build the foundational habits that help children — and homeschool families — truly flourish. If you're a homeschool mom looking for a classical Christian approach to raising lifelong learners, this conversation is for you.

Leigh opens by sharing how it took her twelve years of homeschooling to truly understand what her husband had been telling her all along — that what children need most is consistency. It wasn't until she had a second set of young boys while her older sons were teenagers that the power of habits became undeniable. The routines she had built into Robert and John made it possible to keep the family functioning; without them, the whole thing would have fallen apart.

From that personal foundation, the conversation moves into the heart of the book: a framework of five habits — naming, attending, memorizing, expressing, and storytelling — that Leigh calls the building blocks of a grammar education. These aren't abstract academic concepts. They're what every good mother already does instinctively: naming the dog, teaching a toddler not to touch the stove, helping a child memorize where mom will be in Walmart. The point is to recognize these habits, name them, and practice them with intention.

The episode takes a fascinating turn when Emma asks about AI and technology. Leigh's position is clear: children under 12 don't need screens at all. Not because technology is inherently evil, but because children who never learn to entertain themselves, sit still, or be alone with their thoughts will struggle with self-control for the rest of their lives — with or without technology. The habits of self-governance have to come first.

The episode closes with Leigh's single most important piece of advice for new homeschoolers: find a mentor. Not a curriculum. Not a method. A person who seems to be doing it well and is willing to let you watch.

What You'll Learn

- What the art of grammar actually means — and why it's about far more than memorization

- The five core habits of the grammar stage: naming, attending, memorizing, expressing, and storytelling

- Why Leigh says attending is the one habit she'd tell every family to start practicing today

- How habits shape not just academic ability but character, self-control, and spiritual formation

- Why parents need to self-assess their own habits before they can effectively pass them on

- What Leigh thinks about AI and technology — and her recommendation for families with children under 12

- Why feeling inadequate to homeschool is universal — and why it's not actually the obstacle you think it is

- How the habits formed in the grammar years show up years later in college anatomy and chemistry courses

- Where to find Leigh online and which books to read alongside The Habits

This episode of Everyday Educator is sponsored by:

Summit Ministries

Do you want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endure, and friends and faith for life? Summit's Student Conferences equip

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