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Homeschool History: Islamic Identity and Raising a Strong Ummah
Published 1Â week ago
Description
If there is one subject in my homeschool that I am absolutely, fiercely consistent with year after year; it is history. I love it, itâs a deep personal passion of mine, and I truly believe homeschool history is one of the most powerful tools we have as home educators.
đĽ Important Links Mentioned in This Episode:
â Click Here to join the WAITING LIST for Launch Your Homeschool https://ourmuslimhomeschool.com/waiting-list đ â
Our Hijri & Gregorian Book of Centuries: https://amzn.to/4ouRXes (aff.)
Other Islamic History Book Recommendations: https://ourmuslimhomeschool.com/2018/09/homeschool-islamic-history-curriculum-choices.html
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Intro Music â by PEARLS OF ISLAM: https://www.pearlsofislam.co.uk (Bismillah from the album âLove is My Foundationâ)
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True history isn't about memorizing dry timelines, dead kings, and random facts just to pass a test. It is a living story. In fact, so many of our deep societal problems today - from growing racial divides to the rise of Islamophobia - could be healed if we simply understood our history better. When our children know where they come from, they understand who they can be.
In this week's episode of the podcast, Iâm sharing my exact approach to teaching history, how we use Charlotte Mason principles in a Muslim home, and the specific resources I use to anchor my childrenâs identity.
The Charlotte Mason Approach to Homeschool History
When it comes to the how of teaching history, I lean heavily on the wisdom of Charlotte Mason. She completely rejected dry, utilitarian textbooks. Instead, she believed history should be taught through "living books"âbiographies, letters, literature, and diaries that make the past come alive.
Charlotte Mason famously wrote:
"The history of a country is a life, a drama, a romance, to be lived over by the child with the actors."
She advised starting with the history of your own country when children are young to give them a sense of place, before moving to a world view later.
As a Muslim family, I take that brilliant principle and add our own vital layer:Â We begin with our Islamic history first.Our children need to see the world through the lens of the Prophets, the Seerah, and the growth of the Ummah. Then, we look at the country we live in, and finally, we expand to a global world view.
Tracking Homeschool History with a Book of Centuries
To ground this learning, we use a Book of Centuries: a personalized, blank timeline book where a child records major events, key figures, and scientific discoveries as they encounter them over the years.
Because I struggled to find one that fit the worldview of a Muslim family, we actually created and published our own! Our Book of Centuries includes the Hijri calendar side-by-side with the Gregorian calendar. It allows your children to see exactly what was happening in the Islamic world at the exact same time major events were unfolding in European or world history. Buy it here: https://amzn.to/4ouRXes (aff.)
Alongside this, my children produce their own notebooks. We step completely away from dry, consumable worksheets that treat history like a transactional test-prep subject. đđ Worksheets require zero imagination and usually end up in the bin. Instead, give your child a blank journal. Let them write summaries, draw maps, or sketch historical clothing. What goes onto those pages reflects their unique imagination and personal connection to the story.
Building an Unshakeable Islamic Identity
Finding high-qua