Project work and the question of genuine self-employment

By Leoni Zilke

February 25, 2026

Personal responsibility, project work, self-directed learning

Project work often begins unspectacularly. A child chooses a topic and engages with it. They read, research, and try something out. After a few days, notes are on the table. Maybe a model emerges. Maybe a presentation. Maybe just a lot of thoughts.

But what's really behind it?

What is project work?

Project work means working on a topic over a longer period of time. Not just gathering knowledge, but organizing and applying it. A topic is not tested, but worked on.

This creates a learning process that connects multiple levels. Research, planning, practical implementation, and reflection interlock. The result can be a model, a text, a presentation, or a practical solution.

However, the journey is more important than the destination.

What project work can achieve  

Project work is a wonderful way to expand learning beyond just knowledge, because in a good project, life skills are developed.

Think for yourself 

A project does not prescribe a finished schema. Children must select and evaluate information. They notice when something is still unclear. They learn to formulate questions more precisely. This strengthens their confidence in their own thinking.

Plan and structure 

A major undertaking requires order. What comes first. What later. How much time is needed. Children learn to break down tasks and assess them realistically. This ability doesn't grow through a single worksheet, but through experience.

Hang in there

Not everything succeeds on the first try. Materials don't fit. Research leads nowhere. An idea doesn't hold up. In such moments, it shows whether a child sticks with it. Project work makes it clear that learning is work. And that perseverance pays off.

Take on responsibility 

A project belongs to the child. They have a say in it. They contribute to it. This responsibility changes their attitude towards learning. They don't just work for external feedback, but for their own goal.

Many classic tasks are highly structured. A project opens this framework a bit. Some children thrive in it, others need closer guidance. Both are normal.

It is important that project work is not left to chance. It needs clear goals and a realistic scope. Without structure, there is no deep learning, only restlessness.

Where Project Work Reaches Its Limits 

Project work can do a lot, but it cannot replace a foundation.

Reading, writing, and arithmetic must be built systematically. These fundamentals are developed through practice and repetition. A project can deepen and apply them, but not create them anew.

The timeframe also plays a role. A project can be demanding, but it shouldn't be overwhelming. It requires clear agreements, intermediate steps, and feedback. If this support is lacking, an undertaking can easily get lost in the details. Then there's a lot of activity, but little clarity. Good project work combines freedom with guidance.

Project work in the homeschooling context

In homeschooling, projects can often be more easily integrated into daily life, as topics arise organically from everyday experiences. A garden leads to questions about biology, planning a travel budget requires mathematical thinking, and organizing a birthday party demands organizational skills and a sense of time.

Parents immediately see where their child is safe and where support is needed. This proximity to the learning process allows learning decisions to be adjusted and the scope and pace to be controlled.

This is exactly where the importance of structure becomes apparent. Even in homeschooling, a project needs clear goals and binding steps. Freedom without a framework doesn't help.

Project Work – A Conclusion 

Project work is not a magic bullet and does not replace systematic instruction. However, it is a meaningful way to deepen learned knowledge and, beyond that, to practice skills that a person truly needs.

This is about more than creativity. A child learns to identify problems clearly and develop viable solutions. They check information, weigh options, and prioritize. They plan realistically and realize that time is not arbitrary. They experience that their own actions have consequences, how important careful preparation is, and that carelessness means extra work. These are not just nice side effects, but the foundations for an independent life.

In the end, a perfect poster doesn't matter. What's crucial is that a young person learns to think independently, act reliably, and take responsibility for themselves and others.

About the author

Leoni has been living in Paraguay with her family since 2016. She knows from personal experience how challenging—but also how rewarding—a new start abroad can be. A new language, a new culture, a new school: she has gone through all of that herself.

Even though she was never part of a homeschooling family, she follows the topic with interest today – perhaps precisely because of that. In her writings, she wants to share what she herself would have needed: honest insights, helpful thoughts, and encouragement for other families venturing abroad.

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