麻豆影视

麻豆影视

Exclusive: Microschools Fill Niche for Students with Disabilities, Survey Shows

The latest snapshot of the sector also shows a sharp increase in the percentage of such programs accepting public funds.

The Balbaugh family tried other private options before finding Streams of Hope, a microschool that specializes in serving students with autism, ADHD and learning disabilities. (Courtesy of Jenny Balbaugh)

Help fund stories like this.

When Steve and Jenny Balbaugh鈥檚 daughter turned 5, they were hesitant to enroll her in the Fort Wayne, Indiana, schools. Ali was born with a rare brain defect that affects her learning and had been diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 want her to get lost,鈥 Jenny said.

But private options fell short. A Montessori school she attended for kindergarten let her sleep all day. When she reached sixth grade, the Christian school she went to stopped providing extra help with schoolwork. The principal, Jenny said, explained that extra services weren鈥檛 important because 鈥99% of our kids go [on to] higher education.鈥

That鈥檚 when the Balbaughs tried Streams of Hope Christian School, a smaller, unconventional program based in an Anglican church that lets students move at their own pace. Now in eighth grade, Ali can use a calculator for math problems and gets help with writing assignments.

鈥淓very single child’s plan is individualized,鈥 Jenny said, 鈥渁nd they don’t move on until they have mastered whatever they鈥檙e working on.鈥

Families like the Balbaughs, who have children with autism, ADHD and dyslexia, are seeking out small programs like Streams of Hope 鈥 part of a growing education sector known as microschools. Almost two-thirds of operators say their programs draw students considered neurodivergent, according to the latest snapshot of the movement from the National Microschooling Center, an advocacy organization. The survey of 400 microschool founders in 41 states also shows that children with other disabilities represent one of the next largest populations served, with 53% of school operators reporting that these students are enrolled in their schools. 

Like all private schools, however, microschools don鈥檛 have to accept students with disabilities or provide the same services as public schools, putting some parents who might otherwise take advantage of school choice in a tough spot.

The report, released Monday and provided exclusively to The 74, is the center鈥檚 second since it launched in 2022. It shows that half of operators said they opened their programs to help students who are 鈥渟ystemically underserved.鈥 The results also point to a sharp increase in microschools receiving public funds for tuition: A third of microschools now accept education savings account funds, according to the survey, up from 18% in . 

To Don Soifer, executive director of the Las Vegas-based center, the results show that the tight-knit settings microschools offer provide a better fit for some students. Educators launching microschools, he said, demonstrate a 鈥渄eeper knowledge鈥 of such needs and are responding to them in 鈥渄eliberate, well-informed ways.鈥

鈥楧idn鈥檛 have the resources鈥

Jill Haskins, the executive director of Streams of Hope and a former teacher in the Fort Wayne public schools, said her program is flexible enough to provide some of the accommodations students couldn鈥檛 get in public schools. She recently accepted a student whose individualized education program required him to get one-on-one instruction in math, written lecture notes and help transitioning between classes 鈥 services his public school didn鈥檛 provide. 

鈥淚t wasn’t through any fault of the teachers. They didn’t have the resources,鈥 she said. With tighter student-teacher ratios, she added, meeting students鈥 needs becomes easier. 鈥淎 lot of what we do is just kind of natural.鈥

Soar Academy, an Augusta, Georgia, microschool, specializes in serving students with autism, anxiety and dyslexia. (Soar Academy)

Other school leaders say needs or behaviors that might have been more pronounced in public school diminish in smaller settings. Kenisha Skaggs, who launched Soar Academy in Augusta, Georgia, in 2011, has accepted students who were suspended multiple times for incidents such as throwing a chair in class.

鈥淲hen you change that environment, that stuff goes away,鈥 said Skaggs, who ran a tutoring program out of her attic before launching the school. 鈥淣ine times out of 10, we do not have those behavior issues.鈥 

The national center鈥檚 data provides a view of the sector from the perspective of operators and potential school founders. But more complete data can be hard to come by as most states generally don鈥檛 count them as a separate type of school. They might be grouped with traditional private schools or with families that homeschool. Soifer estimates that there are anywhere from 95,000 to 125,000 microschools nationally. He described the sector as 鈥渧ery much a growing and evolving movement,鈥 and one that is attracting a more diverse mix of families and educators.聽

The median number of students in each microschool is 16, up from 12 when Soifer began tracking the movement. Forty percent of microschools operate in commercial spaces, a quarter in churches and 20% in private homes. 

According to the operators surveyed, about a third of families using microschools earn below the average income in their area. Fifteen percent of students they serve are in foster care, and 21% have unstable housing situations or don鈥檛 have enough to eat.

Microschools are more likely to serve elementary school-age students than older students, according to the latest analysis of the movement from the National Microschooling Center. (National Microschooling Center)

The largest segment of students attending microschools, 40%, attended public schools before they made the switch. A third were homeschooled, and only 4% previously attended charter schools, according to the report.

But there鈥檚 been little change in the demographics of microschool founders. About 65% are white, and almost three-fourths are current or former educators. 

Some teachers 鈥 41% according to the survey 鈥 drew their inspiration to start a school from their own children鈥檚 struggles to learn. That鈥檚 why Haskins, who homeschooled her three children, enrolled her son in the microschool she now runs. When he turned 7, she realized he wasn鈥檛 learning to read at the same pace as her two older children. As a teacher, she was stumped.聽

鈥淚’ve taught in public school. I know how to teach reading, but I wasn’t making progress with him,鈥 she said. A doctor diagnosed him as 鈥減rofoundly鈥 dyslexic. 鈥淗e’s doing really well, but I think he would drown in a public school.鈥

Streams of Hope Christian School in Fort Wayne, Indiana, serves some students who pay tuition with an education savings account for students with disabilities. (Streams of Hope Christian School)

Public funds for tuition

While microschools are private, some parents of children who attend them are able to for tuition through state scholarship programs and education savings accounts.

[Inline_story url=”/article/failed-west-virginia-microschool-fuels-state-probe-and-some-soul-searching/”]

Some of those programs are only available to students with disabilities, like , which provides an average of about $6,600 toward tuition. Mary Gorlich, whose daughter Cora has learning disabilities and severe hearing loss, uses the scholarship to attend Soar Academy. 

鈥淪he was just so lost in her previous school. She’s not a problem and doesn’t make any noise, but they ignored her,鈥 Gorlich said about the Catholic school Cora attended. 鈥淚 used to pick her up crying every day 鈥 because of just how miserable she was. Now I pick her up smiling and she tells me about the math she understood.鈥

Cora Gorlich, right, attends Sora Academy, which has a kitchen where students cook every week. (Soar Academy)

Indiana鈥檚 ESA program is also restricted to students with disabilities. Currently, two Streams of Hope students, including Ali, use the program to pay tuition. Another five were recently evaluated for special education services, which would qualify them for the ESA. 

But even though some microschools specialize in serving students with disabilities, as private schools they have to do so. Critics of ESAs and other voucher-type programs stress that students鈥 rights under the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act aren鈥檛 guaranteed once they leave the public schools. 

A on Georgia鈥檚 scholarship program, for example, states: 鈥淚f you choose to remove your child from the public school 鈥 even if the state is providing some funds for the private school 鈥 then you are refusing parental consent to services under IDEA.鈥

Denise Marshall, CEO of the Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates, an organization that works to protect the rights of students with disabilities, noted that even if microschools provide some services, parents might not have any recourse if there鈥檚 a conflict. In most cases, she said, there is no right to due process.

鈥淭his still leaves families unable to push back if they disagree with the IEP or it is not followed,鈥 she said. 

That鈥檚 why many West Virginia families opt to stay in the public schools even though the state has the Hope Scholarship, a universal ESA program, said Jamie Buckland, who leads West Virginia Families United for Education. She advises both families and providers on school choice.

She has no doubt that some children with dyslexia and sensory needs could benefit from attending a microschool. But she said there are 鈥渟o many families whose kids鈥 accommodations prevent them from choosing private options.鈥

Southeast Florida has a thriving microschool community that includes , led by Susan Safra, who previously taught in a large Broward County high school. Now she teaches about 50 students through field trips, farm work and surfing lessons. But she said her program is not equipped to serve students with behavior issues, major learning disabilities or 鈥渁ny kind of impulsivity.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 not because we don鈥檛 want them. Our teachers are not trained,鈥 she said. 

Skaggs, with Soar Academy, said she can only accept a few students who need one-on-one support throughout the day. But there鈥檚 still strong demand for her program. With an enrollment of 100, Soar is larger than most microschools; another 200 students are on a waiting list. 

With Republican-led states continuing to advance ESA legislation, some leaders in the microschool community are also strong proponents for expanding eligibility to all families. 

In Indiana, Haskins hopes lawmakers are successful next year. If that happens, she said she鈥檚 going to 鈥渄esperately push鈥 families to apply for it.

Tuition for a microschool can be significantly less than that of a traditional private school, but can still be unaffordable for some families. (National Microschooling Center)

鈥淭hen we can raise tuition to become sustainable,鈥 she said. Tuition ranges from $2,500 to $5,000 annually, with additional fees for curriculum and 鈥溍 la carte鈥 offerings like a Lego club, Pickleball and Bible classes. The rates are as much as she can charge 鈥渨ithout completely breaking our families.鈥

Students from Soar Academy in Augusta, Georgia, traveled to the state capitol in Atlanta to lobby for passage of an educational savings account law. (Soar Academy)

And in Georgia, Soar students and staff lobbied for passage of the state鈥檚 , which will provide students in the lowest-performing 25% of public schools with $6,500 to attend private schools. 

鈥淲e’re super excited about bridging that gap for students that just can’t afford to attend a private school but don’t qualify [for the special needs scholarship],鈥 Skaggs said.

Gorlich鈥檚 daughter, now a sophomore, made the trip to Atlanta to of the bill. 

Attending Soar has given Cora a 鈥渕ad confidence boost,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is my extremely miserable, won’t-talk-to-anybody, very closed-off kid who now testifies in front of the state Senate for educational rights.鈥

Help fund stories like this.

Republish This Article

We want our stories to be shared as widely as possible 鈥 for free.

Please view The 74's republishing terms.





On The 74 Today