
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


With so many homeschool philosophies to choose from—Charlotte Mason, classical, unschooling, eclectic—it’s easy to feel overwhelmed. How do you choose the right approach, especially when you’re raising multiple children with very different personalities?
In this encouraging and practical episode, Kaitlin Zara sits down with veteran homeschooling mom of seven, Bonnie Landry. Bonnie homeschooled for 32 years and shares how she built a peaceful, relationship-first home without rigid rewards, pressure-heavy academics, or fear-based decision-making.
From teaching bookish learners and high-energy boys under one roof to prioritizing connection over conflict, Bonnie offers wisdom for homeschooling moms who want confidence, clarity, and joy—especially in large families.
If you’ve ever worried about falling behind, choosing the “wrong” philosophy, or losing your identity as a nurturing mom while becoming the “teacher,” this conversation will renew your courage.
Sponsor: Franciscan University of Steubenville
Bonnie Landry is a Catholic wife and mother of seven, living on Vancouver Island, British Columbia. Five of her children are now married, and she is a grandmother to twelve. Bonnie homeschooled for 32 years and now hosts the podcast Make Joy Normal: Cozy Homeschooling, where she shares encouragement on homeschooling, community, babies, and cultivating joy in family life.
Her mission is simple: Make joy normal.
Podcast: https://makejoynormal.buzzsprout.com/
Bonnie’s 32-year homeschooling journey, raising seven children
Teaching multiple personalities under one roof
Multi-sensory learning in a large family
Why relationship comes before academics
A peaceful alternative to rewards and consequences
How removing pressure can increase academic success
Creating independent learners without a rigid curriculum
Balancing bookish children with high-energy kids
Managing one-on-one time when toddlers are underfoot
Why “falling behind” may not be what you think
Being fearless in your homeschool decisions
The importance of real-life community for homeschooling moms
Connection fuels cooperation.
You don’t need pressure to produce strong academics.
Homeschool philosophy should serve relationships, not the other way around.
Large family homeschooling can be peaceful.
Be fearless.
By homeschoolingsaints4.7
2828 ratings
With so many homeschool philosophies to choose from—Charlotte Mason, classical, unschooling, eclectic—it’s easy to feel overwhelmed. How do you choose the right approach, especially when you’re raising multiple children with very different personalities?
In this encouraging and practical episode, Kaitlin Zara sits down with veteran homeschooling mom of seven, Bonnie Landry. Bonnie homeschooled for 32 years and shares how she built a peaceful, relationship-first home without rigid rewards, pressure-heavy academics, or fear-based decision-making.
From teaching bookish learners and high-energy boys under one roof to prioritizing connection over conflict, Bonnie offers wisdom for homeschooling moms who want confidence, clarity, and joy—especially in large families.
If you’ve ever worried about falling behind, choosing the “wrong” philosophy, or losing your identity as a nurturing mom while becoming the “teacher,” this conversation will renew your courage.
Sponsor: Franciscan University of Steubenville
Bonnie Landry is a Catholic wife and mother of seven, living on Vancouver Island, British Columbia. Five of her children are now married, and she is a grandmother to twelve. Bonnie homeschooled for 32 years and now hosts the podcast Make Joy Normal: Cozy Homeschooling, where she shares encouragement on homeschooling, community, babies, and cultivating joy in family life.
Her mission is simple: Make joy normal.
Podcast: https://makejoynormal.buzzsprout.com/
Bonnie’s 32-year homeschooling journey, raising seven children
Teaching multiple personalities under one roof
Multi-sensory learning in a large family
Why relationship comes before academics
A peaceful alternative to rewards and consequences
How removing pressure can increase academic success
Creating independent learners without a rigid curriculum
Balancing bookish children with high-energy kids
Managing one-on-one time when toddlers are underfoot
Why “falling behind” may not be what you think
Being fearless in your homeschool decisions
The importance of real-life community for homeschooling moms
Connection fuels cooperation.
You don’t need pressure to produce strong academics.
Homeschool philosophy should serve relationships, not the other way around.
Large family homeschooling can be peaceful.
Be fearless.

3,365 Listeners

814 Listeners

822 Listeners

700 Listeners

816 Listeners

6,799 Listeners

1,374 Listeners

2,627 Listeners

853 Listeners

2,622 Listeners

1,282 Listeners

1,626 Listeners

2,916 Listeners

1,295 Listeners

752 Listeners