Vol. I · The Family Ledger

Homeschool that honors faith, family, and the child in front of you.

Rooted Almanac is an AI companion for classical Christian families. Profile each child, track growth across twelve pillars of learning, and let scripture-grounded lesson plans generate themselves — from the living room to the library, the woods to the workshop.

Bible-basedFamily-centeredClassical spine
Open journal, Bible, and pencils on a wooden table

— from the almanac, harvest week —

Chapter One

Twelve pillars of a whole education.

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Faith & Scripture

Catechism, memorization, and Bible-shaped worldview.

Literacy

Reading, narration, copywork, and living books.

Math

Number sense, logic, and everyday problem solving.

Nature & Science

Field study, observation, and the language of creation.

Farm & Land

Soil, seasons, animals, and stewarding what grows.

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Finance & Stewardship

Budgeting, giving, work, and wise resource use.

Arts & Making

Music, handicraft, drawing, and the practice of beauty.

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Coding & AI

Logic, tools, and building with discernment.

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Languages

Greek, Latin, and the grammar of great ideas.

History & Civics

Timeline, people, places, and ordered liberty.

Life Skills

Cooking, mending, emergency readiness, and care.

Physical

Strength, play, outdoor labor, and bodily health.

Chapter Two

How the almanac works.

Curriculum is a servant, not a master. Life is the classroom — we just help you see it.

  1. I.

    Profile each child

    Age, interests, faith formation, gifts, and the wobbly bits. We meet them where they are.

  2. II.

    Set the benchmarks

    Twelve pillars, ten levels each. See growth in Scripture, math, science, arts, languages, life skills — all at once.

  3. III.

    AI grows the plan

    Bible-rooted lessons, nature-study units, handicraft projects, and read-aloud plans generated from trusted sources — Charlotte Mason, classical educators, field guides, and Scripture.

  4. IV.

    Log the life

    That museum visit? The lemonade stand? Teaching the little ones the Beatitudes? Log it. Real life already teaches real skills — we help you make it visible.

A page from the almanac

A lesson, generated for Wren, age 9.

Every plan cites real sources, weaves Scripture without preaching, and pushes learning out into the yard, the barn, and the woods.

Pillar · Nature & Science45 min · ages 8–11

The Forest Community: Where Trees, Fungi, and Birds Keep Company

"The earth is the Lord's, and the fullness thereof." — Ps. 24:1

We'll walk the woods, count the layers God stacked into one place, and learn why a healthy forest is a living community.

Hands-on

Map three canopy layers in your yard; count species per square meter.

Scavenger hunt

Acorn · rotted log · animal track · nitrogen-fixer · a bird's call you don't know.

Sourced from: John Muir Laws — How to Keep a Nature Journal; Cornell Lab Merlin ID; ESV Study Bible.

Chapter Three

Real life counts. Log it.

A morning at the museum. Two weeks helping grandpa build a bookshelf. A Sunday teaching the little ones the Beatitudes. Everyday life already teaches real skills — we help you make it visible.

Sept 14

Visit to the natural history museum

Nature & ScienceHistory
Sept 09

Sold jam at market — $37 profit

FinanceArts
Sept 03

Memorized Romans 8:28–39

FaithLiteracy
Aug 28

Built a chicken tractor with dad

Life SkillsMathPhysical

A note from the workshop

"We built this for the family with a Bible open on the counter, shelves of well-worn books, and a child who learns better with mud on their shoes than at a desk. The curriculum should follow the child, not the other way around."

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