creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

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Running a Homeschooling Running a Homeschooling Collective / Alternative School Andrew Delamarter @ADNYCE [email protected] Presented to Huge OffTopic Discussion Group 10/2/2012 Visit us at radschool.org

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Discover what we learned by forming and running a homeschool collective. This is an alternative schooling concept where parents home school together. We are based in Clinton hill, Brooklyn and at radschool.org. We are always ready to assist and give advice to others seeking to form their own homeschooling collectives, homeschooling coops, or alternative school concepts.

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Page 1: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

Running a Homeschooling

Running a Homeschooling Collective / Alternative SchoolAndrew Delamarter@[email protected]

Presented to Huge OffTopic Discussion Group 10/2/2012Visit us at radschool.org

Page 2: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

Homeschooling collectives.• Families join together to create a mixed-ages cottage school

environment

• Curriculum and subject matters are set via consensus and

planning meetings.

• Funds are raised to pay for part-time teachers and specialists –

music, sports, dance, etc.

• Parents can teach subjects and contribute time where they can.

• Parents lead field trips, bring classes into their workspaces and

business.

• Combines elements of historical small-scale schools and ‘true’

homeschooling.

• Parents file homeschooling plans with the state.

Page 3: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

• ‘Old-time education’ - 60% of families homeschooled prior to

1920.

• 1930s-1980s homeschoolers were prosecuted under

compulsory schooling laws.

• Homeschooler victory in 1987 Leeper v. Arlington, TX case set

precedent and prosecutions stopped.

• Homeschooling in many forms has expanded ever since.

• 2% of US children are homeschooled.

• Current gov’t push is to regulate-to-death homeschooling as it’s

politically impossible to ban it outright.

Homeschooling History

Page 5: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

• Every study shows homeschoolers doing better

academically than state-schooled children on

standardized academic tests.

• In the 2000 national geography bee home schooled

children were:• 1st, 2nd, and 3rd places• 4 or the top 10 • 27 of the 167 finalists

Homeschooling works.

Page 6: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

Who we are / what we do:

Dancer / ChoreographerDance studio owner

Bar / Restaurant ownerFashion photographers

NY Times reporterChef

Boutique ownerIndie film distributor

FilmmakerSearch geek (me)

Page 7: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

Key Issue: Making relationships work

Page 8: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

Weekly field trips: Align to curriculum and mandate team work to synthesize learning

Page 9: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

Weekly field trips: Small groups can often get ‘backstage tours’ and special access and attention

Page 10: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

• It could be a list of things to talk about.

• Or maybe just once concept with a few points.

• It could be a list of things to talk about.

• Or maybe just once concept with a few points.

This is the most common slide.

Weekly field trips: Well-behaved homeschool groups are beloved by the folks we visit.

Page 11: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

Physical activity: We can wear our children out. They come home physically exhausted and collapse into bed.

Page 12: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

Cookies. Milk.

• Nutterbutters • Whole milk

• Ginger snaps • Non-fat

• Oreos • Half & Half

• Oatmeal raisin • 1% milk

• Thin mints • 2% milk

This is a table.

It’s up to us what sports they learn. They can suggest ideas and make them happen.

Page 13: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

As part of the community and due to small, human size of the group, we get to know our neighbors.

Page 14: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

Art plays a big part. Here they are Andy Goldsworthy-inspired environmental transient art.

Page 15: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

Here we are at Occupy Wall Street. This sign made by 6-year old Olivia pretty much sums up the experience.

Page 16: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

Older kids teach the younger kids. If an older kid claims to be bored we force them to show mastery of a subject by teaching it to the younger kids.

Page 17: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

The NY Times fashion magazine wrote a snarky article about us. Don’t let the haters get you down!

Page 18: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

The hard part.Clashing personalities.Finding new families.

Diets.Curriculum.

Page 19: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

What is it?.Homeschool?

Homeschool collective?Cottage school?

One-room schoolhouse?

Alternative School.

Page 20: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

We used SEO and online marketing tactics to find new families by framing the school as an ‘Alternative School’ since ‘Homeschooling collective’ is not a common phrase.

Page 21: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

You need to market your collective. Create a blog, post photos, and track visits using Google Analytics

SEO work begins here

Page 22: Creating and running a homeschool collective / coop / alternative school

Read this book. Stay under the radar. Only accept people into the school you trust, who have reputations to uphold, and are committed to the concept. Accept people will drop out and re-create the school each year.