Homeschooling a Child with Learning Differences: Tips, Strategies & Resources

5 min read · February 12, 2026 · HomeschoolGo

For many families, homeschooling wasn't plan A. It became plan A after watching their child struggle — really struggle — in a traditional classroom. A child with dyslexia who couldn't keep up with reading groups. A child with ADHD who couldn't sit still for six hours. A child with anxiety who dreaded school every single morning.

If that resonates with you, here's something important to know: homeschooling is often transformative for children with learning differences. The flexibility, individualization, and one-on-one attention that homeschooling offers can give these kids the environment they need to finally thrive.


Understanding Learning Differences in the Homeschool Context

A mindset shift worth making: learning differences don't mean your child can't learn. They mean your child learns differently — and a traditional one-size-fits-all classroom often isn't designed to accommodate that difference.

At home, you can:

  • Go at your child's actual pace, not the class's pace
  • Teach to their strengths rather than constantly remediating weaknesses
  • Use the learning modalities that work for them — hands-on, auditory, movement-based, visual
  • Schedule around their energy — if your ADHD child is sharpest in the morning, do hard work then
  • Reduce sensory overwhelm — no crowded hallways, no fluorescent lighting, no social landmines every day

Homeschooling a Child with Dyslexia

Dyslexia affects how the brain processes written language. Children with dyslexia often have average or above-average intelligence but struggle significantly with reading, spelling, and writing.

What Works for Dyslexic Learners

Orton-Gillingham (OG) based instruction is the gold standard for teaching dyslexic learners. OG programs are structured, multisensory, and sequential — they teach reading through seeing, hearing, and doing.

Recommended curricula for dyslexia:

  • All About Reading / All About Spelling — highly accessible OG-based programs popular with homeschoolers
  • Barton Reading and Spelling System — specifically designed for parents to use at home with no tutoring experience
  • Logic of English — comprehensive, well-designed, and effective
  • RAVE-O — a research-based intensive program

Other strategies that help:

  • Audiobooks for content learning (separate from reading instruction)
  • Voice-to-text for writing
  • Extra time on all tasks
  • Strong emphasis on verbal discussion and oral narration

Homeschooling a Child with ADHD

ADHD (Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder) affects executive function, attention, and often impulse control. Traditional schooling — with its demands for prolonged sitting, waiting, and compliance — is often a terrible fit for ADHD kids.

What Works for ADHD Learners

Short lessons. Instead of 45-minute blocks, try 15–20 minutes of focused work followed by movement breaks. The Pomodoro technique (work/break cycles) can be very effective.

Movement. Let your child stand, pace, use a wobble board, or bounce on a trampoline between (or even during) lessons. Physical movement supports focus.

Novelty and engagement. ADHD brains are driven by interest. Lean into your child's passions whenever possible and make lessons hands-on and varied.

Clear structure. Visual schedules, checklists, and consistent routines reduce the cognitive load of figuring out "what comes next."

External accountability. Many ADHD kids do better when they know someone will check their work or set a timer. Build in gentle accountability structures.


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Homeschooling a Child on the Autism Spectrum

Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) presents differently in every child, but many autistic learners share some characteristics that make homeschooling a good fit:

  • Need for predictable routines
  • Intense interests that can be leveraged for deep learning
  • Sensory sensitivities that are hard to manage in a school environment
  • Social interactions that benefit from more support and intentionality than a classroom provides

Strategies for Autistic Learners

  • Use special interests as a learning gateway. A child obsessed with trains can learn math, history, geography, science, and writing all through that lens.
  • Build predictable routines with visual schedules
  • Include your child in schedule-making — predictability reduces anxiety
  • Seek out occupational therapy (OT) if sensory or fine motor issues are affecting learning
  • Find social opportunities that are lower-pressure than traditional school (small-group classes, co-ops, interest-based clubs)

Accessing Services and Evaluations

Even if you're homeschooling, you may be entitled to services through your local public school district. Under IDEA (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act), homeschooled children may be eligible for:

  • Speech therapy
  • Occupational therapy
  • Evaluations for learning disabilities
  • Specialized instruction

Eligibility and service availability vary by state and district. Contact your local district's special education office to ask about what's available for homeschoolers in your area.


Connect with Communities Who Get It

You are not alone. There are vibrant communities of parents homeschooling children with learning differences:

  • SPED Homeschool (spedhomeschool.com)
  • Homeschooling with Dyslexia (homeschoolingwithdyslexia.com)
  • ADHD Homeschooling Facebook groups
  • Autism Homeschool groups on Facebook and Reddit

Related articles:

  • How to Teach Your Child to Read at Home
  • How to Start Homeschooling: A Complete Beginner's Guide
  • How to Create a Homeschool Schedule That Actually Works

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