As everyone gears up to start another year homeschooling I thought I’d share about our homeschool room makeover. As the kids get older they type of toys and resources changes so the homeschool room must change with it! This homeschool room ideas involves having a space for everything, homeschool room paint color, doors to make the school supplies look lest cluttered, and more. I hope this homeschool organizing encourages and inspires you! Will you update your space with some fresh home school room ideas this year?
Homeschool room
To start with I want to make sure you know something – our school room was already very organized! When i said we were giving our homeschool room a makeover I had lots of people ask me WHY? The why is simple, the room felt crowded, cluttered, and I didn’t enjoying being in our room. Here is our room before: (tour of our school room from 2011-2013). So joine me as I give you a tour of our updated homeschool room to hopefully get you excited for back to homeschooling with plenty of homeschool room ideas. I know I’m visual and I like to see what other people’s spaces look like. So here are some home school room ideas to inspire you!
Homeschool Room Ideas
You see everything has a place. We had all the toys, tools, maps, and resources we needed to do school and life. But you see just because things are organized doesn’t mean it is de-cluttered or nice!
I decided it was time to simplify! Time to declutter! Time to reduce!
Step #1 – Reducing our stuff
I went through our books and got rid of ones that we didn’t read regularly. We have a great public library nearby, we can always borrow some. I have to have some good literature on hand to keep them reading, but only books that are GREAT that they will read again and again.
I reduced our toys. Over the course of birthdays, Christmas, and garage sales we had accumulated a lot of toys. They were all nice, but we just had too many. I’ve found kids actually play better when there aren’t too many things {toys} to distract them. So… we went through and got rid of worn, hardly used, duplicate purpose toys. We simplified and reduced our toys by at least 30%. We donated all our stuff to Goodwill – good life lesson for the kids.
Homeschool room paint color
A fresh coat of plaint can do wonders for a room – it will change the way it feels and you feel when in it! And at $30 or so a can, it is affordable too! Think carefully about the color you are going to paint your room.
UPDATE: For those that hav asked our color (because I agree it is the best paint color for homeschool room) – Behr Premium Plus Ultra Stain Blocking Paint & Primer in One. Mate #460E-3 Smokey Slate
Best colors for homeschool room
- Dark colors will make the room seem dark and drab. You may feel sad, depressed, or tired.
- Bright sunny colors like yellow, orange, light blue, and light green can make you feel happy and energized.
- Red can make you feel angry.
- Blue is calming, soothing. But too dark and it may stifle your creativity.
- Green will energize you, make you feel alive and vibrant.
Because of the color of our adjoining rooms I was somewhat limited, but I finally settled on this seafoam turquoise color. I wanted a calm, bright, energizing homeschool room.
Moving all of our furniture was a LOT of work! My desk was heavy, as was the aquarium, but we made it work.
I am the designated painter in our house so I taped up the edges and began painting, meanwhile the kids got to watch a Disney movie. It took me a couple hours to tape & paint the first coat. We used the Behr paint with primer built in and found we only needed one coat – score!
Home school room ideas
Instead of our old shelves that were practical, but not pretty, we bought and built the Expedite IKEA shelf. This was the most expensive part of our makeover, but these sturdy shelves are made to last and I’m glad we made the investment!
They were super easy to put together and are VERY sturdy! We got the large 5×5 unit (25 cubbies) and I’m so glad we did. We got white DRÖNA boxes to for some of our cubbies. These boxes are much larger & heavier duty than the canvas ones you will find at Target. Again, worth the investment. I was a little worried at first about white. Honestly the other colors where {ahem} ugly. But months later they are still bright & white – I love them!
We have books, toys (baby/toddler toys & dress-ups are on the bottom shelf hidden in DRÖNA boxes), school manipulatives, puzzles, and more all on our shelves. In case you are wondering, here is a breakdown of the cubbies you can see:
- Top Left: learning resource learning games (Toddler/Preschool)
- Top Middle: Widgets, Melissa & Dough Puzzles
- Top Right: plastic storage box 1 (paint) plastic storage box 2 (misc. craft supplies we use a lot: glue, hot glue gun, pom poms, etc.)
- From Top Left: Elementary Manipulates & Scale
- From Top Middle: readers (Kindergarten to left of blue box holding magazines, 1st & 2nd grade to the right)
- From Top Right: plastic storage box 1 plastic animals; plastic storage box 2 Disney character sets
- Middle Left: Melissa & Doug Food sets (pizza, cake, sandwich flannel set, tea set)
- Middle Middle: Puzzles (25 and larger – lots of different ones!)
- Middle Right: Vet Hospital (Minnie’s favorite toy), Box #1 View master , Box #2 Magnetic Dress-up Dolls, Box #3 polly pocket type Disney Princess dolls
- Next Bottom Left: Red spine means Spanish books
- Next Bottom Middle: Board books
- Next Bottom Right: Baby Toys (easy to get to, not heavy if pulled off shelf, and accommodates all the brick-a-brack!)
- Bottom Left: Girl Dress-up clothes
- Bottom Middle: Boy Dress-up clothes
- Bottom Right: More Baby Toys
Introducing our {De-Cluttered} Home School Room
Here is our room. Now it is neat & de-cluttered too! Do you feel calm and ready to learn?
Our corner with our Ikea shelves has a loveseat. We use to have a full size couch, but this fits better in the space while still giving grown-ups a spot to sit while kids play or to read together. Reading is a BIG part of our day!
Notice the empty wall space to the right of couch and left of bookshelf. Having open wall space it important to having an open, inviting learning space.
The table serves as a coffee table and activity table for our kids. Underneath are train tracks & Duplos for the kids to build with. This is a great multi-purpose space. My Mother-in-law found this at a garage sale. NOTE: I plan on painting the top white when I get the chance!
Instead of our large multi unit kitchen we got a compact all-in-one. The kids still love the kitchen so we still needed one, but this one has lots of storage space and takes up a minimal amount of room. The kids love all the cool sound effects & lights in our new set! In case you were wondering we have the Step 2 LifeStyle Dream Kitchen and we LOVE it! I highly recommend it!
Again, notice the empty walls which make the room feel bigger and cleaner! I included a picture so you could see how the room runs into the front entry way.
Our reading nook is by lots of natural light. We got both of these cute chairs cheap at either a garage sales or freecycle and they are very popular in our house. The shelf was a cheap find at a garage sale. I stock the book shelf with library books on the topics we are studying, easy readers, and rotating picture books to keep the kids reading.
Above our reading corner is our United States map. Notice all the pins on our map – these are places we’ve been. We are trying to get the kids to all 50 states before they leave our “nest” The kids love looking back at it and pointing out the places we’ve been. It is also going to be great for our study of the United States this year!
My desk is also in our homeschool room. I keep my lesson plans on my computer and print off lots of sheets, reserve books from the library, and look things up online. It also allows me to blog while the kids are playing or doing independent seat work. The filing cabinet holds the kids work they’ve completed this year, school memory pages, and all my printable games to help the kids in their studies – all sorted by grade.
Notice that I have only a picture or two on the top of all my surfaces. Even though it is tempting to store things there, I know keeping them mostly clear makes the room feel bigger, and less cluttered!
Our Homeschool workboxes are still working out great! Basically these are a great way to help us keep organized and keep any projects or books organized.
Kids in Kindergarten on up have a box per subject. They bring out one box a time and have all the workboxes, extra reading, lapbooks, manipulatives, etc. they need for that subject.
Toddlers or Preschoolers have one box a day. I add several fun activities to help them learn and keep them entertained while I “do school” with the older kids. You’ll find puzzles, simple worksheets, learning resource items, counting mats, and more.
On top of our workboxes I have our most used school books – draw write now, Learning Year by Year, Books to Build on, Judy early Learning Books, scratch paper for the kids to color, and coloring books.
You can see our pet fish and our dinning room that feeds into our school room. We actually do all our seat work at our dinning room table. We are fortunate to have a separate table in the kitchen where we eat. Unless we have friends over for dinner, this dinning room table is reserved for school. We do try to keep it cleaned off.
Clean, uncluttered surfaces are more inviting to learn at!
We love this holder we got at Target dollar section. It has a separate, organized spot for our markers, bingo markers, crayons, colored pencils, pencils, scissors, etc. You can get a similar one at IKEA too. This is the only thing allowed to be on our dinning room table. Everything else goes back in the correct workbox after we finish the subject.
By keeping the house clean as we go we always feel comfortable inviting neighbors in at a moments notice.
Homeschooling Resources
- Should I Homeschool my child – 5 potentional homeschool pitfalls
- 25 Reasons why I LOVE Homeschooling
- How to choose the right free printable homeschool curriculum
- How does homeschooling work – how we homeschool in only 15 hours a week
- Homeschool Socialization – is it really a problem?
- How to Homeschool for FREE with free homeschool printables
- Why Homeschool – a peak at why we homeschool
- Take a peak at our Homeschool Room
- Homeschool Organization – meet our workbox system
- Homeschool Curriculum – what we choose to use each year
- Get your homeschool started right with these homeschool ideas
- Homeschool attendance sheet and other forms to help you keep organized!
- Free Printable School Memory Book
Free Homeschool Worksheets
We are here to help! We have over 1 milliion free worksheets, games, and activities for students of all ages. Click on the links below!
By Grade:
- Homeschool Preschool
- Homeschool Kindergarten
- Homeschool 1st grade
- Homeschool 2nd grade
- Homeschool 3rd grade
- Homeschool 4th grade
- Homeschool 5th grade
- Homeschool 6th grade
By Subject:
Response
-
I love the map! My husband is a diesel mechanic and he traveled for several years before finding something that was close to home. Family is very important to us and we didn’t want to be apart for long periods of time, so the kids and I traveled with him. This was one of the main reasons we started homeschooling. I didn’t want the kids to keep changing schools every time that we traveled to another state. My kids have been to several states as well and I’m loving the idea of the pushpins as a reminder of where we’ve been. Thanks for this idea and ALL of the other free stuff and advice you have! The new room looks awesome by the way!
Leave a Reply