Methodist Homeschool Curriculum: Complete Guide

Methodist families in the Wesleyan tradition emphasize personal holiness, social justice, and the integration of faith into all of life. John Wesley’s vision of “practical divinity” -faith that works in the world -shapes Methodist educational values. Educate Your Way creates curriculum integrating Methodist perspectives, from personal piety to social responsibility.

Methodist homeschool curriculum with Wesleyan theology, social justice integration, quadrilateral learning approach, and per-subject faith control. Pre-K–8 standards-aligned.

What Makes Methodist Education Distinctive

Methodist education grows from John Wesley’s vision of “practical divinity”. faith that transforms both the individual and the world:

What Methodist Curriculum Includes

When you select Methodist, your curriculum draws from these tradition-specific elements:

Methodist Content in Each Subject

The Wesleyan emphasis on both personal faith and social responsibility creates rich integration across every subject:

Choosing Your Integration Level

Methodist families span a wide spectrum, from deeply liturgical to broadly progressive. Integration levels let you match curriculum to your practice:

Social Justice & Service Learning

Wesley’s dictum to “do all the good you can” finds practical expression throughout the curriculum:

Build Your Methodist Curriculum

Frequently Asked Questions

How does Wesleyan theology appear in the curriculum?

Methodist curriculum integrates Wesley's emphasis on personal holiness, social justice, grace, and the quadrilateral (Scripture, tradition, reason, experience) as ways of understanding faith and learning.

Does this work for both United Methodist and other Methodist families?

Yes. The curriculum focuses on core Wesleyan principles shared across Methodist traditions. You control integration level per subject.

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.