When My Daughter Hyperfocused on Dragons, This Is What I Did

When My Daughter Hyperfocused on Dragons, This Is What I Did

by Lindsey Casselman

From the moment I introduced 8-year-old Grace to the How to Train Your Dragon universe, she become OBSESSED with dragons. This wasn’t just an interest in the movies, it was a full-blown SPIN (special interest).

Dragons. Morning to night. Drawing them. Reading about them. Talking about them. Playing with the toys. Watching the movies. Wearing her dragon costume and sleeping with her dragon stuffies.

But dragons are not real, and not on the list of things to study in our homeschool. We were supposed to be learning about physical geography in Social Studies at that time, and frankly, no one was very excited about it.

Riveting stuff like landforms and regions of North America: plains vs. mountains, the Arctic vs. the Maritimes. The Schoolio course had an ongoing activity throughout where we were creating a booklet as we went through each region, one at a time. Learn the geography. Record the land features, water sources, vegetation, and animals for each.

She had zero interest.

To be honest? Neither did I.

But I’ve been at this long enough to know when it’s time to toss the plan and follow the spark instead. So one day, after reading the lesson to her aloud, I looked at her and said:

“What kind of dragon would live here?”

That was all it took.

Every lesson from that point on was golden. For each region, she studied the environment and designed a dragon that could survive there — down to the smallest detail.

The plains dragon was a dusty yellow and burrowed in wheat fields. It lived in underground dens and hunted at dusk, camouflaging in the tall grasses.

The Arctic dragon was brilliant white, blending into the snow and ice. It was slow-moving, conserving energy in the cold, and had thick scales to withstand frigid temperatures.

Snow wing
Snow Wing Dragon

The Maritime dragon? A shimmering blue sea serpent, waterbound and fast, feeding on fish and crustaceans, curled up in coastal caves during storms.

Swamp Swimmer
Swamp Swimmer Dragon

The mountain dragon was stone-grey and jagged, with thick claws that helped it cling to steep cliffs. She told me it would “echo-roar” through the valleys when it was angry.

Sea Wing
Sea Wing Dragon

She even brought out the clay and sculpted each of them — every single one. We had an entire dragon ecosystem on our homeschool table by the end of the week.

And she remembered everything.

Not just the dragons — the geography. The climate. The vegetation. The animals. The features of each region. It stuck.

Because when learning is connected to something meaningful — even something mythical — it matters. It lands. It lives in their brains and bodies in a way a worksheet never could.

We didn’t abandon the curriculum. We just used it differently. And isn’t that the whole point of homeschooling?

To follow the spark. To shift when something’s not working. To take a kid’s hyperfocus and say, “Yeah, let’s go there.”

Dragons and all.

? Lindsey

certified special-ed educator & co-founder, Schoolio

From Homeschooling to Public School: A Success Story

This is my daughter, Grace. This kid… let me tell you about how she CRUSHED it in her first year in public school…

Grace has been homeschooled since Kindergarten, using Schoolio for her academics of course! 

This year, she transitioned into public school for 7th grade. 

Homeschooling to Public School- Public school wasn’t our initial intention for this year, so she ended up starting mid-year, which is hard. It’s not easy to be the new kid arriving part way through the year. In addition, within two weeks of starting, her teacher went out on medical leave and her class had a series of subs. 

It was a busy classroom. 32 kids, only 8 girls, and several unique needs. 

New people. New routines. New world.

How Did She Do?

She finished yesterday, and here’s a recap:

? Won 1st place in a school-wide art contest (peer voting).

? Won 2nd place in the grade 7/8 stock market simulation contest for the year (thank you Schoolio Financial Literacy!).

? Won 1st place in the intermediate music competition.

? Straight A’s (except for French, which was a B+ despite having never taken it before when her peers started in 1st grade).

But there’s so much more to success than academics and accolades…

? She self-advocated in a busy classroom for her needs, even when it was hard.

? She worked her butt off and independently studied for tests, worked on projects, and brought things home when needed.

? She communicated and set boundaries despite being naturally shy.

? She sought help when she needed it from both school staff and her parents.

? She maintained her integrity and did not waver in the face of peer pressure or the treatment she is deserving of. She even said to me that she wished I could come to her school and teach her classmates all the Schoolio Social-Emotional Learning I’ve taught her! 

? She ran TWO petitions in an effort to improve the school environment. Despite being new, she immediately got involved and activated in the community. 

Y’all, she is a FORCE. I met with her teachers and the principal this week and they said not only is she one of the strongest academically, she’s also the most mature in the class.?

Homeschooling to Public School- THIS is homeschooling my friends. This is the result. Are they academically on-par with other kids their age? For sure. Is that even the most important thing? No! She’s well-adjusted, she knows who she is and what she stands for. She’s independent and hardworking. And she has a strong family foundation to help her when things are tough. 

The transition wasn’t always smooth. She had struggles. But she persevered and handled everything so well. 

If this is what a “weird“, “unsocialized“, and “uneducated” homeschooler looks like, then I’m #TeamWeird all day long.

I couldn’t be prouder of my girl. ❤️ I hope that you are all experiencing success, and I want you to know that even though you worry all the time about whether or not you’re doing “enough” (I worried too!), I promise you that you are. 

Congratulations to every homeschooling parent out there. The gift of the homeschooling experience is worth so much more than just the academics you cover every day. You’re doing amazing.