Most homeschool parents spend 50–100 hours researching, testing, and comparing curriculum options.That includes:
- Reading reviews and blogs
- Watching YouTube comparisons
- Browsing samples
- Asking in Facebook groups
- Trial runs that don’t stick
- Often, this is per subject.
At $25/hour, that’s $1,250–$2,500 of your time.
As the founder of this platform, I learned this the hard way. I spent three months of summer — about five hours a day — researching programs and trying to understand what really matters in curriculum design. In total, I invested over 300 hours exploring how to evaluate homeschool programs — diving deep into educational research, reading foundational works on child development and thinking, and studying what makes a curriculum truly support the development of cognitive skills.
I read the works of major thinkers like Lev Vygotsky, analyzed data on curriculum effectiveness, and mapped the links between cognitive development and subject mastery.
That journey didn’t just help my own family — it became the foundation for Conscious Schooling, a platform built to save other parents from the same trial-and-error and give them science-backed clarity. A place where parents could finally get answers grounded in science, not just opinions.
That deep dive became the foundation of Conscious Schooling.Book design is the art of incorporating the content, style, format, design, and sequence of the various components of a book into a coherent whole. In the words of Jan Tschichold, "Methods and rules that cannot be improved upon have been developed over centuries. To produce perfect books, these rules must be revived and applied." The front matter, or preliminaries, is the first section of a book and typically has the fewest pages. While all pages are counted, page numbers are generally not printed, whether the pages are blank or contain content.