Due to Covid on the rise again both parents and teachers are choosing to homeschool their children for this upcoming school year due to the new Delta Variant of Covid. However, for a parent of a child with special needs for most parents and teachers homeschooling isn’t an option or at least being able to afford homeschooling curriculums can become very costly. But if you’re considering homeschooling your child and want to know the best homeschooling curriculums for special needs children than you’re in the right place.
Homeschooling Curriculums
Little Wooden Toybox
This Homeschool curriculum is great for children with special needs because it includes everything sensory play that incorporates math, reading, and writing skills into it’s curriculum. It also includes a book selection and CVC words for children to practice.
Right Brain Learning System
This Homeschooling curriculum is great for special needs kids because it helps children struggling with problems they face from Autism, Asperger’s, ADD, ADHD, Dyslexia, Dysgraphia, Dyscalculia, Dyspraxia, Sensory Processing and Auditory Processing Disorders.
BluebeePals
This homeschooling curriculum includes a lot of great digital resources such as an homeschooling lesson plan, learning app, and homeschooling activity workbook that is a hard copy of digital. The apps include math, reading, and writing and also occupational and speech apps to help with your child’s learning progress at home.
Time4Learning
This Pre-K to 12th Grade Homeschool learning curriculum is great because it offers each child their own learning path, with animated lessons, interactive activities, unit assessments, and integrated printable worksheets for reinforcement. It’s activities uses interactive games, puzzles and programs that have built in feedback and repetition capabilities, and activities have tasks that are broken up into manageable units which help improve student self-esteem.
Oak Meadow
This homeschool curriculum includes coursebooks that has 36-weekly lesson plans, with a variety of assignments, activities, and readings. For the home teacher’s convenience, we’ve included assignment checklists, planners, materials lists, and learning assessment rubrics to track student progress. Many families enjoy the structure of our 36-week lesson plans, and others take advantage of the built-in flexibility of the curriculum design by adding, subtracting, or adjusting the material as needed or desired.
Conclusion
Overall, each curriculum is unique in it’s own way and what may work for you may not work for someone else. Each child is unique and different and each child with special needs requires different learning styles and formats of learning when working on academic subjects. Homeschooling special needs children is an option when dealing with public schools and covid. However, with the right curriculum, patience, and determination learning at home can be fun. Just check out this video below about how you can use things around your inside the home just to build fine motor skills with your child.