This post was originally published on the [AV Edu Resources blog].
The Short Answer
Roadschooling isn't just a logistics problem to solve — it's an emotional adjustment most families underestimate, for both parents and kids. The van, the route, the curriculum — all of that is figure-out-able. What's harder to prepare for is the grief of leaving friends behind again and again, the guilt of wondering if your kids are learning enough, and the exhaustion of never quite getting a break from each other.
Here's what a few actual roadschooling parents have said about the hardest parts — and how they got through them.
The Biggest Obstacle Has Been Not Burning Out
One roadschooling mother, Jessica, put it simply when asked about her family's toughest challenge: the biggest obstacle they'd faced was not burning out, since the road offers so many opportunities that they've had to choose carefully — otherwise they'd end up broke and exhausted.
It's a quiet but important permission slip: choosing less, on purpose, isn't failure. It's often what makes the whole thing sustainable.
We Struggled With the Idea That Our Kids Weren't Learning Enough
One family, four years into roadschooling two children then aged 7 and 10, admitted this doubt openly: they had struggled with the fear that their kids weren't learning enough, or wouldn't be able to reintegrate into traditional school if they ever chose to go back.
They kept going. Their children thrived. The doubt didn't mean they were doing something wrong — it meant they were paying attention, which is usually a good sign, not a bad one.
This Time, It Was My Own Daughter
Caroline Makepeace, who roadschooled her two daughters for thirteen years, described a moment of real friction: after retiring from teaching specifically to escape classroom battles, she found herself in the same struggle again — only this time with her own child, whom she called the biggest challenge she'd encountered.
Her way through it: patience with herself and her daughter in the hard moments, and deliberately remembering the calm days, not just the chaotic ones.
I Let Myself Grieve, Instead of Judging the Feeling Away
One mother who eventually stepped back from full-time RV life described the unexpected grief of that transition — letting go of her plan to homeschool her sons, watching friends keep traveling while her family stayed still. She admitted it felt almost silly to grieve something she knew she'd been fortunate to experience, but she chose to let herself grieve anyway rather than judge the feeling away.
Whether you're just starting out or eventually stepping back, that honesty is worth holding onto.
Try It Yourself
Want to try a few of these prompts first? 5 free sample prompts are here — one from each area of the pack.
If they're useful, the full set is in 80 AI Prompts for Roadschool Parents (€24.99) — 80 prompts total, covering location-based learning, core subjects on the go, weekly scheduling, documentation, hands-on activities, and social connection — plus a bonus Travel Learning Log and a full appendix on the emotional side of life on the road.
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