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I Stopped Teaching My Kids in the Morning – Here’s What Happened

Turns out, not all learning needs to happen before lunch. Who knew?
For years, I tried to be the mum who starts homeschool at 9am sharp. Whiteboard ready. Pencils sharpened. Children miraculously eager and dressed. Spoiler: they weren’t. I wasn’t either.Mornings in our house felt like an Olympic sport – and I was failing every heat. Tears (theirs), toast in hair (mine), and lessons that felt more like battles than blessings.Then one dreary Tuesday, fuelled by too much coffee and not enough patience, I stopped. I closed the books. I told the girls we’d try something different: learning… later.

The Afternoon Shift: Why We Made the Change

Here’s the thing. My kids are not morning people. Neither am I. And that’s OK. Home education gives us the glorious freedom to shape learning around our actual lives – not some inherited school timetable.

We started slow. Mornings became gentle – reading, play, a bit of telly (yes, really). We talked. We tidied. We cuddled. And after lunch, once everyone had *landed*, we cracked on with our learning.

What Actually Happened When We Let Mornings Go

  • Less stress, more smiles: Without the pressure to “start school” by 9am, everyone relaxed. Our days began with connection instead of conflict.
  • Better focus: Afternoon lessons were calmer, more productive – fewer tears, more thinking.
  • More ownership: My girls felt part of the rhythm. They knew we’d learn – just not while still waking up.
  • Real-life integration: Mornings became rich with “invisible learning” – helping cook, budgeting, nature walks, long chats about deep things. All gold dust.

But Is It Legal in the UK?

Yes, 100%. Under UK law, you must provide an education that’s efficient, suitable, and full-time – but there’s no rule about when that learning must happen.

“Full-time” doesn’t mean 9 to 3. It means consistent, ongoing education that meets your child’s needs. Afternoon-only? Absolutely fine – especially if your child thrives that way. More on UK home ed law here.

What Our Day Looks Like Now

Here’s a loose outline – emphasis on loose. We’re rhythm people, not rigid schedule folk:

  • 9–11am: Slow start. Breakfast, chores, free play, books, sometimes screens. I prep dinner or drink hot tea without interruption (wild).
  • 11am–1pm: Outdoor time or an outing – nature walks, shops, library, trampolining, dentist. Life, basically.
  • 1–2pm: Lunch and reset.
  • 2–4pm: “Learning window.” We do maths, writing, projects, science, art – whatever fits.
  • After 4pm: Independent reading, games, free time. Then tea, bath, bed. Bliss.

For the Record: This Isn’t Lazy, It’s Intentional

If you’re waking up every morning already behind, please hear this: you are not failing. Your children do not need a perfect mum. They need a peaceful one. Or at least, one who isn’t barking “GET YOUR MATHS DONE” at 8.42am.

This isn’t giving up. It’s choosing calm. Choosing connection. Choosing a rhythm that works with your family, not against it.

Want to Try It? Here’s a Free “Afternoon Learning Menu”

I made a little printable to help you ease into an afternoon rhythm. Pop it on the fridge and let your kids pick what they fancy. No pressure. Just possibilities.

Download the Afternoon Menu (Free)

You’re not doing it wrong. You’re just doing it differently. And that’s the magic of home ed.

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