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Easy Peasy All-in-One Homeschool: A closer look

Learn about Easy Peasy All-in-One Homeschool, a free Christian curriculum perfect for families on a budget.
Lisa Thorsen
Written byLisa Thorsen
4 min read
Key takeaways
  • Easy Peasy All-in-One Homeschool offers a free, comprehensive Christian curriculum for grades PreK-12, featuring 180 days of lessons across core subjects and additional topics like art and music
  • It's ideal for budget-conscious families with independent learners, particularly in upper elementary and high school, but may pose challenges for younger students or those needing more hands-on learning.

Easy Peasy All-in-One Homeschool is a free Christian curriculum designed for grades PreK-12. It offers 180 days of lessons across all core subjects, plus extras like art and music.

Research from the National Home Education Research Institute (NHERI) shows that homeschooled students typically score 15 to 25 percentile points higher than public school students on standardized academic achievement tests. Most homeschool families report completing core academic subjects in 3-4 hours per day for elementary students, compared to the 6-7 hours typical of traditional schools, due to the one-on-one instruction and absence of classroom management overhead (NHERI, 2024).

What is Easy Peasy All-in-One Homeschool?

Easy Peasy All-in-One Homeschool is a free Christian curriculum for PreK-12 students. You can find it at allinonehomeschool.com and allinonehighschool.com. Created by Lee Giles in 2011, it covers 180 days of lessons in core subjects, plus Bible, music, art, PE, and computer. Each day's work links to online resources like videos and worksheets, making it easy for students to learn independently. It blends traditional teaching with the Charlotte Mason approach, focusing on living books and picture studies.

What makes it unique

Easy Peasy is made for families who think they can't homeschool due to time, money, or experience. It's all online and completely free—no trials or upsells. Each grade level includes daily lesson links with clear instructions, so you don’t have to plan lessons. You can also teach multiple kids together in subjects like history and science, while they work on their own math and language arts. The optional My EP Assignments tracker helps keep tabs on your kids' progress.

Honest assessment of limitations

Since it’s all online, kids spend a lot of time on screens. This can make it hard to know if they actually did the work or skipped parts they didn't get. Some parents think the lessons can feel short or disconnected—like two-minute language lessons. It also uses older materials, like McGuffey readers, which some kids find outdated. The program was designed for a state where first grade starts at age 8, so younger kids might struggle with the independence it requires. Strong readers in upper elementary and high school usually do best.

Who it works best for

Easy Peasy is great for budget-friendly Christian families with self-directed learners, especially those in upper elementary through high school who can follow written instructions. It fits well for families who like the Charlotte Mason method or as a supplement for certain subjects. New homeschoolers enjoy the daily guidance that cuts down on decision fatigue. Families with several kids benefit from its multi-age setup. However, younger students or those needing hands-on learning might want to explore other options.

The bottom line

Easy Peasy delivers a complete, genuinely free Christian curriculum that helps families homeschool on a budget. It's an excellent resource for independent learners who thrive with online materials. But keep in mind the trade-offs—heavy screen time, less accountability for completed work, and a focus on Christian content. Many families successfully use it as a starting point and add other subjects as needed, while enjoying the fact that the core curriculum costs nothing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Lisa Thorsen
Written by
Lisa Thorsen

Co-founder, BetterSchool

Lisa is the co-founder of BetterSchool and a homeschool mom of three. BetterSchool administers the largest independent homeschool community in the country — over 350,000 families across all 50 states.

When COVID hit, Lisa and her husband pulled their children out of school and hit the road. Homeschooling wasn't the plan — it was a necessity. But somewhere along the way, the family fell in love with it: the time together, the ability to tailor lessons to each child's interests, learning at their own pace, the freedom to travel, eating healthy on their own schedule, and the countless other benefits that come with homeschooling.

As they traveled, Lisa kept discovering incredible hands-on learning experiences that most homeschool families had no way of finding. She built BetterSchool to make it easy for every family to find and book the experiences that make learning come alive.

Through her community, Lisa has helped hundreds of thousands of parents navigate homeschooling, while also helping local businesses find and serve the homeschool community. She is the former managing partner of a law firm focused on business law and mergers and acquisitions — BetterSchool is her second technology startup. She holds a J.D. from California Western School of Law and a B.A. from Penn State.

Related articles

Understanding living books in homeschoolingUnderstanding the Charlotte Mason method

Table of Contents

  • What is Easy Peasy All-in-One Homeschool?
  • What makes it unique
  • Honest assessment of limitations
  • Who it works best for
  • The bottom line
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