Easter Isn’t a Unit Study (And That’s Okay)

If you’ve ever found yourself thinking,
“Should I be doing more for Easter?”
this article is for you.

You don’t need to prove anything this Easter—not to your kids, not to other homeschoolers, and not to yourself.

Because somewhere along the way, Easter picked up expectations it was never meant to carry—lesson plans, crafts, themed weeks, printables, and activities that look great online but feel exhausting in real life.

Let’s say this out loud:

Easter doesn’t need to be a unit study to be meaningful.

Easter was never about performance

The heart of Easter isn’t found in color-coded schedules or Pinterest-worthy projects. It’s found in the resurrection—quiet, powerful, and deeply personal.

And that’s good news for homeschool moms.

Because the message of Easter reminds us that God works through rest, surrender, and renewal, not hustle.

If your homeschool rhythm feels tired right now…
If you’re limping toward the end of the year…
If you don’t have the energy to “make it special”…

You’re not doing Easter wrong.

Faith formation happens in ordinary moments

Some of the most meaningful Easter conversations happen:

  • At the breakfast table
  • On a walk around the block
  • During family prayer
  • While reading Scripture together—simply, without a worksheet attached

Your kids don’t need a themed activity to understand hope, sacrifice, or redemption. They need your presence, your honesty, and your willingness to pause.

And honestly? That’s enough.

If you want something simple, here are a few gentle ideas

Not assignments. Not obligations. Just options:

  • Read the Resurrection story together—once. Slowly.
  • Ask one open-ended question at dinner:
    “What do you think Easter means for our family right now?”
  • Let Good Friday or Easter Monday be lighter academically on purpose
  • Take a walk and talk about new life, growth, and fresh starts

No prep. No pressure. No guilt.

Your homeschool doesn’t need more “extras”

Spring is often when homeschool moms feel the most behind—and the most tempted to add more.

But Easter invites us to do the opposite.

To pause.
To release what isn’t working.
To remember that growth often happens underground before we ever see it.

You don’t need to prove anything this Easter—not to your kids, not to other homeschoolers, and not to yourself.

You’re doing better than you think

If all you do this Easter is:

  • Show up
  • Love your kids
  • Keep going, imperfectly

That’s not failure.

That’s faithfulness.

And faithfulness is exactly what Easter celebrates. 💛

Lisa Nehring
Let's Connec

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