
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


When the shelter-at-home orders were put in place in March of 2020, millions of families suddenly found themselves in a mandatory trial run of homeschooling. As the weeks turned into months and a new school year approached, a large number of these families decided to stay the course and continue educating their kids at home. Curriculum providers, like Apologia, found themselves struggling to supply the increased demand for resources. Homeschooling was already the most significant educational movement of the last 50 years. Now a coronavirus pandemic ushered in a tidal wave of new homeschooling families. Are you riding the wave or treading water, lost and adrift at sea?
By Davis and Rachael Carman4.9
2727 ratings
When the shelter-at-home orders were put in place in March of 2020, millions of families suddenly found themselves in a mandatory trial run of homeschooling. As the weeks turned into months and a new school year approached, a large number of these families decided to stay the course and continue educating their kids at home. Curriculum providers, like Apologia, found themselves struggling to supply the increased demand for resources. Homeschooling was already the most significant educational movement of the last 50 years. Now a coronavirus pandemic ushered in a tidal wave of new homeschooling families. Are you riding the wave or treading water, lost and adrift at sea?

8,693 Listeners

3,758 Listeners

154,081 Listeners

4,784 Listeners

1,717 Listeners

3,368 Listeners

5,377 Listeners

36,456 Listeners

45 Listeners

66,478 Listeners

2,506 Listeners

1,437 Listeners

462 Listeners