Islamic Studies
for Kids
A fun, age-appropriate Islamic education program for children aged 5–12. Covering Aqeedah, Fiqh, Seerah, Duas, Akhlaq, and basic Arabic — taught by caring, certified teachers in engaging one-on-one online sessions.
Course Overview
What is Islamic Studies for Kids?
Islamic Studies for Kids is a comprehensive, structured program that gives Muslim children a solid foundation in their deen — covering beliefs, worship, manners, Prophetic stories, daily duas, and Islamic identity — all taught in a way children genuinely enjoy.
Our teachers are trained to work with young learners, using stories, questions, activities, and age-appropriate examples to make each lesson memorable, meaningful, and spiritually uplifting for every child.
Skills & Outcomes
What Your Child Will Learn
Complete Course Structure
Course Structure of Islamic Studies for Kids
- Allah is One — His names and beautiful attributes (Al-Asma Al-Husna)
- The six pillars of Iman (Islamic faith) explained simply
- Angels — who they are, what they do, why we can’t see them
- The revealed books — Quran, Injeel, Torah, Zabur
- All the Prophets sent by Allah — from Adam to Muhammad ﷺ
- The Day of Judgement — what happens, heaven and hell (age-appropriate)
- Building love for Allah — not just fear
- Why Allah created us — purpose and meaning
- Answering “Why do we pray?” and “Who made the world?”
- Q&A games about Allah’s names
- Draw and label the six pillars of Iman
- Storytelling — Allah’s creation of the world
- How to make Wudu — steps in order with intention
- The five daily prayers — times, number of Rakahs, positions
- How to pray step by step — standing, Ruku, Sujud, sitting
- What breaks Wudu and what breaks Salah
- Basics of fasting in Ramadan — what it is and why we do it
- Halal and Haram food — simple rules children can apply daily
- Practical — children practice Wudu and prayer postures
- Understanding the meaning of each prayer position
- Making Salah a loved habit, not a chore
- Live Wudu demonstration with teacher
- Practice prayer positions step by step on-screen
- Halal/Haram food sorting activity
- The Prophet’s ﷺ birth, childhood, and family in Makkah
- His character before prophethood — honesty, kindness, generosity
- How the first revelation came — the cave of Hira
- The Hijrah to Madinah and building the first Muslim community
- Key events — Badr, Uhud, Conquest of Makkah
- The Prophet’s ﷺ final days and the message he left for us
- Making children love and admire the Prophet ﷺ personally
- Connecting Seerah lessons to modern daily life
- How can I be like the Prophet ﷺ today?
- Timeline of the Prophet’s ﷺ life — drawing and labelling
- Seerah quiz — story recall questions
- Role-play: “What would the Prophet ﷺ do?”
- Dua before and after eating — with Arabic and meaning
- Dua before sleeping and waking up
- Dua when entering and leaving home
- Dua when entering and leaving the masjid
- Morning Adhkar — Ayatul Kursi, last 3 Surahs, 3 Quls
- Dua for parents, dua for guidance, dua before studying
- Tasbeeh — SubhanAllah, Alhamdulillah, Allahu Akbar (33×)
- Arabic with meaning — children understand what they say
- Building a habit of dua as conversation with Allah
- Connecting each dua to the moment it is used
- Dua flashcard games — teacher tests, child responds
- Daily dua diary — child ticks which duas they said today
- Prophet Adam — creation, Jannah, coming to earth
- Prophet Ibrahim — fire, building the Kaaba, sacrifice
- Prophet Musa — Pharaoh, parting of the sea, Ten Commandments
- Prophet Yusuf — the well, Egypt, reunion with family
- Prophet Isa — miraculous birth, miracles, message
- Prophet Yunus — the whale, patience and repentance
- Prophet Nuh — the ark, floods, faith under pressure
- What lesson does this Prophet’s story teach us?
- Connecting stories to emotions — patience, gratitude, courage
- Children retell stories in their own words
- Story retelling — child narrates back after listening
- Draw a scene from the Prophet’s story
- Moral discussion — “What would you do?”
- The importance of honesty — stories of truthful Prophets and Sahabah
- Respecting parents — rights of mother and father in Islam
- Kindness to siblings, friends, neighbours, and animals
- Islamic greeting — As-Salamu Alaykum and its meaning
- Table manners, bathroom etiquette, masjid behaviour
- How a Muslim child should behave at school and with friends
- Akhlaq as Ibadah — good character is worship
- The Prophet ﷺ said: “I was sent to perfect good character”
- Practical scenarios — what do I do when someone is mean to me?
- Scenario discussions — right and wrong choices
- Good deeds chart — child tracks kind actions during the week
- Hadith of the week on character — memorized and explained
- The Five Pillars — what each one is and why it matters
- Shahadah — what it means to declare faith in Allah and the Prophet ﷺ
- Zakat — sharing with those in need; Islamic giving explained simply
- Hajj — the pilgrimage to Makkah; what it looks like and why Muslims do it
- Islamic months — Muharram, Ramadan, Dhul Hijjah and their significance
- Eid Al-Fitr and Eid Al-Adha — how we celebrate and why
- Islam as a complete way of life — not just prayer
- Why every pillar connects to love for Allah and community
- Five Pillars poster — child draws and labels
- Ramadan countdown project and Eid preparation
- Virtual Hajj tour — teacher shows Kaaba and Mina
- Arabic alphabet recognition — all 29 letters (linked with Noorani Qaida)
- Islamic terms every Muslim child should know — Masjid, Wudu, Hijab, Ummah, Jannah
- Common Arabic greetings — As-Salamu Alaykum, JazakAllah Khair, Alhamdulillah
- Numbers 1–10 in Arabic — with Islamic counting context
- Days of the week and Islamic months in Arabic
- Building Islamic vocabulary naturally through conversation
- Arabic is the language of the Quran — children feel connected
- Supported by Noorani Qaida classes if enrolled
- Flashcard vocabulary games in Arabic
- Arabic word of the week — used in sentences
- Islamic vocabulary quiz at end of each term
How We Teach
Teaching Approach for Young Learners
Every session is designed to be interactive, enjoyable, and age-appropriate — because a child who loves learning Islam will carry it for life.
Every concept is introduced through a story — whether from the Quran, the Prophet’s ﷺ life, or the Sahabah. Children remember stories far longer than facts.
Teachers ask open questions that encourage children to think: “Why do you think Allah created us?” — building both knowledge and a reasoning Islamic mind from a young age.
Each session begins with a quick 5-minute review of the previous lesson. Duas, Islamic vocabulary, and key facts are revised regularly so nothing is forgotten.
Drawing, colouring, flashcard games, quizzes, Islamic word searches — every session includes at least one activity that makes the lesson visual and memorable for the child.
Parents receive a written report every week — what was taught, what the child learned, areas to review at home, and a suggestion for reinforcing the lesson as a family.
Our teachers are carefully selected not just for Islamic knowledge but for their ability to connect with children — patient, warm, enthusiastic, and genuinely invested in every child’s growth.
Who Is This For?
This Course Is Perfect For
The perfect age to build Islamic foundations — curious, fast-learning, and ready to fall in love with their deen through engaging lessons.
Parents raising Muslim children in the West who want structured Islamic education outside of school hours — at home, online, and with a real teacher.
Families who homeschool and want a professional Islamic Studies curriculum as a core subject, taught by a qualified teacher — not just workbooks.
Children who know very little about Islam and need a structured, gentle, and encouraging start — this course is built for beginners with zero assumed knowledge.
Course Details
Everything You Need to Know
Give Your Child the
Gift of Islamic Knowledge
Have questions about the course, your child’s age group, or which level to start at? Fill out our contact form and our team will respond within minutes.
