Updates to Homeschool Co-ops book coming soon!
Carol Topp's book Homeschool Co-ops: How to Start Them, Run Them and Not Burn Out, is getting updated.
Carol Topp's book Homeschool Co-ops: How to Start Them, Run Them and Not Burn Out, is getting updated.
Homeschool leader Sarah Andrews claims that my book Homeschool Co-ops: How to Start Them, Run Them and Not Burn Out helped reduce her workload!
A homeschool co-op leader struggles with getting curriculum returned to the group.
A homeschool co-op leader asks if forming an LLC or a nonprofit corporation would be better.
The Department of Labor is considering requiring businesses (and that would include nonprofits) to give every Independent contractor a "Right to Know" document explaining why they are not classified as employees.
Handling supply fees in a co-op
Carol Topp quoted talking about homeschool co-ops and all the opportunities available to homeschoolers in this article from EpochTimes.
One year my co-op got creative with how to explain our policies, so we created a quiz and made a skit doing it as a game show. Here’s the whole quiz if you’d like to see it: 1. If…
An experienced public school teacher wants to work in a homeschool co-op instead. What does she need to know?
Does limited liability status for a homeschool co-op make sense?