Curriculum Library

Homeschool curriculum, curated.

3 picks across math, language arts, science, history, and more — every entry hand-reviewed for grade fit, teaching philosophy, religious content, and cost. Use the filters to narrow to your family.

The Fallacy Detective teaches students to identify and critique logical errors through direct instruction, practical examples, and guided exercises. Each lesson focuses on a specific fallacy type with contemporary illustrations, helping students develop analytical reasoning and persuasive writing skills.

Secularclassicaleclectic

Logic · 6–12

The Art of Argument

Classical Academic Press

Strong alternate

The Art of Argument uses Socratic questioning and structured exercises to teach students how to identify, construct, and evaluate logical arguments. It emphasizes mastery of logical fallacies and valid reasoning patterns through practice and reflection.

Secularclassicaleclectic

Writing · 3–8

The Writer's Jungle by Brave Writer

Brave Writer

Strong alternate

The Writer's Jungle uses nature observation and playful discovery to develop young writers' confidence and voice. Rather than prescriptive rules, it encourages authentic expression through freewriting, editing lessons, and grammar in context, aligned with Charlotte Mason principles of learning from living books and personal observation.

Secularcharlotte masoneclectic

How we curate

Every entry is researched against the publisher's official page plus at least two independent reviews — Cathy Duffy, Rainbow Resource, and homeschool community sources — so the grade range, religious content, philosophy fit, and cost reflect reality, not guesses.

We tag each curriculum on a 9-value religious-content scale (secular through classical Christian) and a 6-value teaching-philosophy axis (classical, Charlotte Mason, eclectic, traditional textbook, unit studies, and unschooling-leaning), so you can find something that fits your family without reading 30 reviews first.

Each row is reviewed before it's published. Pricing is approximate; always confirm with the publisher before purchasing.