New here
Thought I'd chime in because I love this subject!
I homeschooled my children; they are all adults now and I'm helping with my grandchildren. I was atheist at the start, so it wasn't for religious reasons. I just wanted my children to be able to think and learn for themselves, and not be drones or lemmings. I never did like school, so I stayed away from the 'school at home' and instead did what I think most would call "unschooling", but I did have some structure and rules. I was a single mom and we were all very close; besides when I was at work, we all had the same schedule and did things like chores, meals, and learning together. Our main source of learning was nature - lots of hiking, nature study, and nature journaling. I learned about Charlotte Mason's ideas and took from her copywork and dictation to learn how to write properly [used whatever books they were currently interested in] - and the idea of "living books" or "twaddle-free books". No junk in our home. I also ditched the tv (again, not for religious reasons, but because I saw that it was mostly trash). We checked out books and educational dvds from the library, and my main rule was they had to be learning something.
I bought whatever curriculum caught their eye - the teacher's manual so they had all of the information. They really were not interested in most curriculum, but they did have a few things sitting around. The one exception to this is I did have them all go through Rod & Staff's 5th grade English book ... all the English grammar they would ever need to know. One child decided to dig a little deeper on his own. A curriculum they all enjoyed reading was Life of Fred (math). SO fun. We visited the library once a week so they could refresh their stock. They were all responsible for their own books and I made them learn how to use the card catalog system to find books. The librarian in our home town just loved us and learned to know what each child was interested in and would have things waiting for them each week. She was such a sweet woman! My youngest read all things gardening, bugs, trains, and engineering. My oldest read all things math, music, and science. My daughter was mostly interested in history and art (including sewing).
We also did one activity a week; my only rule was: it had to be something we could all do together: they chose a homeschooling art class and a music class that we all went to at the same time. My dad paid for it
And above all, whether when I was still atheist or when I started to walk with the Lord / Yah, my main focus was character. I mean, who cares if you can do chemistry and trig if you cannot respect the person next to you or help the old woman down the street?
As adults in this crazy world, they would all be considered quite successful - not saying that to boast, but just to say "it works". All they need is a loving home with room to grow. Encouragement. A healthy environment. Mama knows best!!
In full disclosure - my youngest didn't learn how to read good until he was about 9 1/2, and always had a hard time with writing and spelling (though we really did try!!!). To this day he cannot do either to save his life, and that's not an exaggeration. Something in his brain is just wired differently, and he sees / writes numbers instead of letters. And my oldest struggled with some kind of dyslexia to where he would literally miss every word that did not have a picture in his head [especially words like of, and, the, to, etc, but other words, too]. Once we realized he was missing these kinds of words, we worked on reading out loud more (before that I was mostly the one that read out loud, and we read together every night).
I got The Good and The Beautiful a few years ago for myself (just trying to keep my brain fresh!!). It is a very beautiful curriculum, easy to use, and it is biblically based without pushing a specific denomination ... per se. I mean, it was written by a Mormon, but there is not even a hint of their religion in it (not that I've seen so far). I got the Pre-K for my grandson and he just loves it
It does have a Charlotte Mason feel to it with the picture studies and art and whatnot, but it does not strictly follow Charlotte Mason. There's also Ambleside Online - I used their "twaddle free" booklist for ideas on books to read together, but they have an entire Charlotte Mason style curriculum for free.