Enrichment & Applied Intelligence
Think of this as an elite intelligence division for your student's mind. Each unit (Creative Writing, Imaginative Reading, or Worldview for example) is a focused, four-session deep dive (60 minutes each) into a captivating topic, open to students from middle to high school.
We operate in small, highly-effective teams (no more than four students) to ensure every "agent" gets personal attention while learning to collaborate. Sessions begin with a quick "situation report" (pre-check), followed by guided practice, discussion, and feedback. Yes, some field reports (homework assignments) are possible...we are training them to be ready for anything!
The Living Daylights
Language, Literature, Logic,
& Executive Functions
Creative Writing
Students plan and write short narratives from prompts (text and visual), use sensory details, precise verbs, dialogue, point of view, and will produce a multi-path CYOA story.
Imaginative Reading Using Love That Dog, Anno’s Journey, and Little Worlds students read and discuss diverse texts, identify and support themes, analyze perspective and structure, explain how images convey meaning, and write short analyses using textual evidence.
Media Literacy & Everyday Argument Students analyze news for claim – evidence –reasoning, spot common fallacies or bias, deliver mini-arguments with credible support, and write a short responses that counter a weak claim using stronger evidence.
Time Management, Organization, &
Study Skills
Students build a weekly plan with time blocks and buffers, run short retrieval sessions across the week, keep materials organized with a simple system, and choose effective study strategies for different scenarios.
Public Speaking & Debate
Students will identify claim – evidence –reasoning, research both sides of an issue from a structured source, deliver short speeches, listen for key points, and offer simple rebuttals grounded in specific lines or facts.
The World is Not Enough
Civics & History
The Declaration, Constitution,
Bill of Rights & Federalist Papers
Students annotate founding texts, explain how constitutional structure (separation of powers, federalism, checks/balances) responds to problems identified in 1776–1787, and defend a position in a short speech using specific line-level citations from primary sources.
Revolutionary War & Civil War
Students can explain key causes and perspectives in the Revolutionary and Civil Wars, compare founding ideals with lived realities, cite line-level evidence from primary sources, and present a short argument about how we should remember these eras today.
World War I &
World War II
Students can explain key causes and features of WWI, trace how its ending contributed to WWII, describe major WWII turning points (in Europe, Africa, and the Pacific), and use line-level evidence from primary sources to answer how we should remember these wars.
Foundations Are Forever
Philosophy & Religion
Worldview
Diving into the Christian worldview students explain core questions (God, truth, humanity, right/wrong, purpose), compare competing claims, and apply a Biblical lens to school and community scenarios.
Names of God
Students explain what “name” means in a Biblical sense, identify several key names and titles of God, connect each name to a specific aspect of God’s character, and apply at least two names to real-life situations in prayer and behavior.
Spiritual Practices for Busy Students
Faith and public school often collide. Students will explain what a spiritual practice is, test at least two realistic habits, connect Scripture to specific daily situations, and craft a simple “rule of life” for school, screen-time, and relationships.
Licensed to Chill
Social interaction through game play
Gaming in Education
What do games bring to the table? Students describe specific learning skills practiced in chess, role-playing games, and cooperative board games; give concrete examples from their own play; and explain how those skills connect to academic and social skills.
Python Coding
Students move from unplugged algorithms into beginner-friendly Python-style coding using Ozaria’s story-based levels. They learn to write clear step-by-step instructions, use loops and basic conditionals, debug simple errors, and explain how their code works.