LDS (Latter-day Saint) Homeschool Curriculum

Latter-day Saint families believe that “the glory of God is intelligence” and that education is eternal -what we learn in this life rises with us in the next. The family is central to Heavenly Father’s plan, making the home an ideal setting for learning. Educate Your Way creates curriculum integrating LDS perspectives, from the Standard Works to pioneer heritage, with control over how deeply faith content appears in each subject.

LDS Latter-day Saint homeschool curriculum with Book of Mormon integration, family-centered learning, self-reliance emphasis, pioneer heritage, and per-subject faith control. Pre-K–8 standards-aligned.

What Makes Latter-day Saint Education Distinctive

Latter-day Saint education flows from a tradition that places extraordinary value on learning, family, and the pursuit of eternal progression:

What LDS Curriculum Includes

When you select LDS (Latter-day Saint), your curriculum draws from these tradition-specific elements:

LDS Content in Each Subject

The Latter-day Saint emphasis on eternal learning and family creates distinctive integration across every subject:

Choosing Your Integration Level

LDS families vary in how much faith content they want woven into academics. Integration levels give you control:

Family-Centered Learning

The LDS emphasis on eternal families makes homeschooling a natural extension of gospel living:

Build Your Latter-day Saint Curriculum

Frequently Asked Questions

Does this include Book of Mormon study?

Yes. LDS curriculum integrates Book of Mormon principles, family-centered learning, self-reliance emphasis, and pioneer heritage with per-subject control.

How does family-centered learning appear?

LDS curriculum emphasizes family as the fundamental unit of learning, includes family home evening connections, and integrates gospel principles of service and self-reliance.

Can I keep some subjects secular?

Yes. Per-subject integration control lets you set each subject independently. You might want faith integration in history and language arts but secular science and math.