Deschooling Isn’t Something You Finish

Sue Patterson

Deschooling isn’t something parents finish once. As kids grow, new stages often bring old school-based fears back. That doesn’t mean something is wrong—it means it’s time to revisit deschooling with fresh eyes.

Do You Need to Revisit Deschooling?

Signs It’s Time Again

Deschooling is often treated like a phase you move through at the beginning of unschooling.

You step away from school structures.
You rethink learning.
You loosen schedules and expectations.

And then you’re supposed to be done.


But most families don’t experience it that way.

Deschooling isn’t a one-time reset. It’s an ongoing process of noticing how old assumptions resurface as children grow and learning looks different than it did before.


What felt fine when your child was younger can start to feel uncertain at a new age.
That doesn’t mean something went wrong — it usually means you’ve reached a new layer.

Why Deschooling Resurfaces as Kids Get Older


As children grow, learning often becomes:

  • less visible
  • more independent
  • harder to measure
  • easier to compare


That shift can quietly reactivate old school-based fears, even in families who felt confident before.

New stages bring new questions, especially when learning becomes harder to see.
What seemed fine at 7 can begin to worry you when it still looks the same at 11.


Signs It Might Be Time to Revisit Deschooling

  • You feel uneasy when learning is harder to see
  • Grade-level thinking or timelines start creeping back in
  • You feel pressure to manage or direct learning again
  • Play, screens, or conversation suddenly feel “not enough”
  • You worry about gaps even when growth is happening
  • Independence feels more stressful than before
  • What worked in earlier years no longer feels steady


These are red flags — just not about your child, or whether unschooling is “working.”
They point to school-based thinking resurfacing for parents.


Deschooling Comes in Layers, Not a Straight Line


Deschooling doesn’t end once you’ve “done it right.”

Each new stage invites you to notice old patterns with fresh eyes.
Each age shift asks for recalibration, not more control.

Revisiting deschooling isn’t starting over. It’s responding to change.



What Helps When It’s Time to Revisit Deschooling


A
t this point, most parents don’t need more ideas or strategies.
They need help untangling old thinking and reassurance that this moment is normal.


The Deschooling Toolkit is meant for moments like this — when old school-based thinking resurfaces and you need help slowing down and recalibrating.

It includes three simple resources:

  • Deschooling for Parents – a reflective guide that helps you notice which worries are coming from school-shaped beliefs, with prompts and reframes to interrupt automatic reactions and revisit your thinking as often as needed.
  • Deschooling for Parents
  • 365 Days of Deschooling – a kid-focused resource that helps make everyday learning more visible through real-life activities, ideas, and reminders, especially when learning feels quiet or unchanged at a new age.
  • 365 Days of Deschooling - 24Q4
  • Affirmation Cards – short, grounding reminders to return to when doubt spikes or urgency takes over, offering steady perspective rather than motivation or hype.
Deschooling Toolkit

Deschooling isn’t “finished” after your first few months of homeschooling or unschooling.
It comes in layers.
As kids grow, familiar fears tend to show up again

— and when they do, it helps to notice them with a quiet “there it is”

and return to deschooling.



FAQ: Revisiting Deschooling as Your Child Gets Older

When is deschooling over?

Deschooling isn’t a one-time phase at the beginning of homeschooling or unschooling. As children grow and learning becomes more independent, old school-based fears can resurface. Many parents revisit deschooling in layers over time.

Why do unschooling doubts come back?

Unschooling doubts often return when learning becomes less visible or harder to measure. As kids get older, parents may start comparing progress to grade levels or worrying about learning gaps, even if growth is happening.

What are signs I need to revisit deschooling?

Common signs include worrying about grade-level expectations, feeling pressure to manage learning again, anxiety about gaps, or discomfort with your child’s independence. These usually point to school conditioning resurfacing — not a problem with your child.

What should I do if I’m worried about learning gaps?

Start by noticing whether the fear is coming from comparison or old school standards. Instead of tightening structure, pause and observe where real-life learning is already happening. Recalibrating your mindset is often more helpful than adding curriculum.

Is it normal to question unschooling as kids get older?

Yes. New developmental stages bring new questions. What felt okay at 7 can feel uncertain at 11 — not because unschooling isn’t working, but because growth looks different at each age.



More about Deschooling
This Facebook widget is no longer supported.
Sue Patterson at microphone in garden
By Sue Patterson April 1, 2026
Discover 10 reasons why spring is the perfect time to try unschooling. Real-life learning, no curriculum, and simple ways to get started this season.
How do Unschooling moms make plans?
By Sue Patterson March 16, 2026
One of the questions unschooling parents ask all the time is: “But how do you plan anything?” Most of us were trained to believe planning means lesson plans, subjects, and assignments. So when you remove curriculum, it can feel like you’ve removed the roadmap too. But unschooling planning isn’t about deciding what your child must learn next. It’s about shaping a life where curiosity has room to grow.
Mom starting Pi Day - Kids Not Interested
By Sue Patterson March 12, 2026
Pi Day Without the Hype — When "Fun Learning" Falls Flat
two kids. Quirky kids? Unschooling & Neurodivergence
By Sue Patterson March 9, 2026
Learn why neurodivergent kids thrive outside traditional school—and how unschooling families use neurodivergent-informed parenting strategies to support all kids.
Real Life Learning opportunities with daylight saving time
By Sue Patterson March 7, 2026
Daylight Saving Time explained: Homeschooling and unschooling families discover 10 surprising facts and real-life learning opportunities when we change the clocks.
By Sue Patterson February 27, 2026
Struggling with unschooling doubt or feeling like you’re not doing enough? Discover how daily reinforcement helps homeschooling parents build steady confidence.
Where did your confidence go?
By Sue Patterson February 14, 2026
Feeling steady one day, and panicking the next?
Strewing the Winter Olympics
By Sue Patterson February 5, 2026
Homeschooling parents discover how kids learn naturally from the 2026 Winter Olympics through strewing—no curriculum, lessons, or checklists required at home.
Unschooling questinos
By Sue Patterson January 22, 2026
Feeling lost about teaching your kids? Sue Patterson shares unschooling reassurance and perspective on learning beyond school— without pressure, plans, or lessons.
Why deschooling is really for parents
By Sue Patterson January 13, 2026
When deschooling feels uncomfortable, it’s usually homeschooling parents—not kids—who struggle. Learn what’s really happening when learning looks “too relaxed.”
More Posts