Episode 10: The Co-op Chronicles — Real Talk from the Strozier Kids
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In this honest, insightful, and at times humorous episode, Alaine and Victoria sit down with Isaiah, Hannah, and Jeremiah (Jay) to dive deep into what it was really like growing up in a homeschool co-op.
This episode delves beyond the curriculum and explores community dynamics, what it was like to navigate homeschool co-ops as kids, what worked and what didn’t, and what they'd tell parents considering co-op education for their own children.
🔍 In This Episode, You’ll Hear:
•What homeschool co-op life was like from a kid’s point of view
•Whether they felt a sense of belonging or struggled to fit in
•What friendships looked like (or didn’t)
•How being in a co-op shaped their identity, creativity, or confidence
•The hardest parts of co-op life (and what made it worth it)
•Tips for parents considering co-op education, mstraight from grown homeschool kids
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🧠 Why This Episode Matters:
Co-ops are a huge part of the modern homeschool experience — but we rarely hear what the kids actually think. This episode unpacks:
•The emotional and social dynamics of being in structured co-ops
•Why belonging matters just as much as academics
•How co-ops shape identity, values, and memories, for better or worse
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1.About 41% of homeschool families in the U.S. are non-white and non-Hispanic. So this is not just a white, affluent movement; we are here and growing.
2.In the 2021–2022 school year, over 3.1 million students were homeschooled nationwide. Homeschooling growth did not simply return to pre‑pandemic levels when schools reopened; many families continued homeschooling, contributing to the sustained higher numbers. Freedom In Education+1
3.In essence, COVID‑19 functioned as a catalyst for many families: lockdowns, virtual schooling, health concerns, and dissatisfaction with remote‑public schooling made homeschooling a viable alternative faster than many anticipated.
4.Many of those families, especially Black and Brown ones, choose homeschool to protect their kids from racism, lowered expectations, and unsafe learning environments.
5.And get this — homeschooled students do well academically regardless of their parents’ income or education level.
Homeschooling is not one-size-fits-all. It now includes families of every income, faith background, and ethnicity.
🎧 Listen + Share:
Tune in on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you stream.
Tag us with your takeaways using #UnmuteTheStory and #CoopChronicles
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