FROM THE VIDEO

Key moments from Backyard Chickens as Homeschool Curriculum with backyard chicken educator Dalia Monteroso:

  • Why passion is grown through repeated exposure, not discovered in a single moment. Watch at 11:01
  • A duckling imprints on a mother hen, a live biology lesson no worksheet matches. Watch at 16:00
  • How a parent’s stress shapes learning more than any curriculum choice. Watch at 32:38

Common questions from parents

Do backyard chickens count as real homeschool curriculum?

Yes. A single flock touches biology (life cycles, imprinting), math (incubation days, feed budgets, egg counts), writing (observation logs), and history (chickens across cultures). One hands-on project delivers several subjects at once, which is often why the learning sticks.

My child does not seem passionate about anything. Is something wrong?

Almost certainly not. Interest research shows a love of learning grows through many low-pressure exposures, not one dramatic moment. A child who groans at a new activity in week one often asks for it by week six. The task is to keep offering unpressured tries, not to wait for a spark.

What age is right for chicken keeping as a learning project?

The material scales. Younger children handle feeding, watering, and observation with an adult alongside; older children take on record-keeping, budgeting, and independent research. Start in spring, when chicks are easiest to raise, and match the responsibilities to the child.

How do I choose the right curriculum if the experts disagree?

You already know your child better than any outside expert does. Pick one guide whose approach you connect with, commit for a season instead of switching constantly, and keep the plan simple. Research shows a parent’s calm matters more to learning than the specific program, so protect the atmosphere first.