i'd always made up my own curriculum, but i've heard good things about the Ron Paul Curriculum. just go to ronpaulcurriculum.com and see if that works out for you. i used time4learning.com for about a year with my daughter when she was about 11 to 12, but i quit using it because the layout of the webpages was frustrating for her and she was hating it, so i went back to creating my own curriculum. time4learning was supposed to be more of an independent learning thing that wouldn't need my constant supervision (i work at home), but it wasn't working out that way because of her frustration with the layout of the pages. it was very confusing, and idk if the site was just broken back then or what, so we just quit that one, but that was about 5 years ago, so it might be better now.
i guess it all just depends on the age of your kids, the level of your involvement in teaching/guiding, and how much time you have to spend vetting what's actually in the curriculum/books your using. my daughter is 16 now. in light of current events, she wants to do my job (i work at home, i don't deal with people at all in person, i make good money for the time i put into it, no mandatory vaccines, etc.) so she's training now for all aspects of that, including all aspects of running a sole-proprietorship as a contractor.
i'd always made up my own curriculum, but i've heard good things about the Ron Paul Curriculum. just go to ronpaulcurriculum.com and see if that works out for you. i used time4learning.com for about a year with my daughter when she was about 11 to 12, but i quit using it because the layout of the webpages was frustrating for her and she was hating it, so i went back to creating my own curriculum. time4learning was supposed to be more of an independent learning thing that wouldn't need my constant supervision (i work at home), but it wasn't working out that way because of her frustration with the layout of the pages. it was very confusing, and idk if the site was just broken back then or what, so we just quit that one, but that was about 5 years ago, so it might be better now.
i guess it all just depends on the age of your kids, the level of your involvement in teaching/guiding, and how much time you have to spend vetting what's actually in the curriculum/books your using. my daughter is 16 now. in light of current events, she wants to do my job (i work at home, i don't deal with people at all in person, i make good money for the time i put into it, no mandatory vaccines, etc.) so she's training now for all aspects of that, including all aspects of running a sole-proprietorship as a contractor.