There is a movement underway.


People are reimagining education

from the ground up.


Watershed Schoolhouse is a full-time microschool that integrates academics, nature connection, justice & equity, and a cultivated inner life.

Watershed Schoolhouse is based in the current and ancestral homelands of the Mechoopda (Chico, California).

The initial cohort is open for Kindergarten through 4th grade.*

*Note: Age exceptions may be made on a case-by-case basis, based on the needs of families and the overall cohort.

Education Reimagined.

Our approach to education integrates four literacies: academic literacy, ecological literacy, communal literacy, and inner literacy. Together, these help create education for whole communities and a healthy planet.

Our Vision:

One day, TK-12 education will help sow the seeds of a regenerative, equitable society in harmony with our changing planet.

Watershed Schoolhouse grows from the idea that we have an opportunity—in the face of crisis—to reimagine the why, the how, and the what of our educational systems, that we may draw forth in our young ones (and in ourselves) the courage, vulnerability, and skillsets to meet our changing world with dignity and grace.

What Makes Watershed Schoolhouse Different?

  • Time Outside

    Forget the idea that when kids reach school age they go inside to sit all day. Watershed Schoolhouse is more than 50% outdoors. Nature is our core teacher.

  • 43-Acre Campus with a Year Round Creek

    Watershed Schoolhouse is hosted on a beautiful campus with a year round creek and a simple schoolhouse just a few minutes outside of Chico.

  • Coherence

    The curriculum not only expands the scope to include Four Literacies, but it also threads meaning through thematic learning and community engagement.

  • Multi-age Learning Environment

    Rather than expecting children to learn only alongside kids their own age, Watershed Schoolhouse relies on a time-tested strategy: learning in mixed-age cohorts.

  • Small Cohort Size

    A microschool is small by design. Students, families, and teachers go on a long-term educational journey together, building understandings—and relationships—that last.

  • Sustained Project-Based Learning

    Part of reimagining education is re-membering that all the broken up “subjects” are really part of a whole. Watershed Schoolhouse brings them back together through project-based learning.

Reimagining The Why

Why do we educate our children the way we do?

The standard answer is all about college and careers. Do these things today, and you will succeed later on. But what if the primary aim of TK—12 education were not simply college or career preparedness, but preparation for a healthy, meaningful life on earth? What if the education of our youth were integral to our collective response to the myriad crises we face—not for tomorrow, but for today?

We want kids to read, write, and think critically. We also want kids to know they belong to a place and a community. We want them to know how to contribute and how to inquire deeply. We want them to cultivate wellness, resilience, and purpose.

Why microschooling?

Microschools are a new kind of school with roots in a very old model of education: the one room schoolhouse. While modern microschools may be far larger than one room, they share the same local, grassroots, and independent nature. Microschools support intimacy and deep, multi-age relationships, and this supports powerful opportunities for learning. As a highly diverse movement in education, they are meeting lots of different needs. They are a kind of counterbalance to mass education and one-size-fits-all curriculum.

Watershed Schoolhouse starts with a single cohort (12-24 students), who travel through their studies together, along with the teacher(s). This process, known as “looping,” allows for long-term mentorship and community building over time.

Why four literacies?

The root of the word “whole” is health. By making space for more than one kind of literacy, Watershed Schoolhouse aims to pull together a more holistic picture of what education can be—and what it is for. We see children engaged in real problem-solving and collaboration, engaged with the needs of their community, and engaged in becoming who they are, rather than who an anonymous curriculum tells them they ought to be.

Reimagining The What

No one can make someone else learn something; learning is a process that comes from within. At best, a successful educator is a facilitator of good scenarios for people to learn from and within.

Within Watershed Schoolhouse, the "good scenarios” are the 8 Units of Study that span K- to 12th-grade. And while each unit opens the door to innumerable questions, lessons, and opportunities, the curriculum is not about content coverage, but depth. While traversing core issues for human beings and the planet, the curriculum spirals outward from the local to the global, and, at the same time, supports a parallel journey from the outer, physical world to the inner world in each student.

8 Units of Study. 8 Essential Questions

  • How do we grow and gather food in a way that is healthy for people and the planet?

  • How do we build in a way that is healthy for people and the planet?

  • How do we tend the waters of this blue planet?

  • How do we participate in ecosystems and life cycles in a healthy, respectful way?

  • How do we help co-create a just, peaceful, and equitable world?

  • How do we meaningfully connect across different cultures?

  • How do we transition into adulthood in a healthy way?

  • How do we offer our unique gifts to the world?

Reimagining The How

We cannot simply reimagine WHAT we teach; we must also reimagine HOW we teach.

Watershed Schoolhouse brings together research-based academics with time-tested approaches to mentoring and nature connection. It combines hands-on classroom learning with boots-on outdoor learning and an equity-based framework throughout. It integrates long-term, inquiry-based, service projects into a meaningful curriculum for children to engage with real questions.

These elements—inquiry, nature, service, projects, imagination, relationship, experience, and diversity—make up what we call “an INSPIRED approach.”

An INSPIRED Approach

  • Inquiry

    True inquiry, founded in the humility of not knowing, and the courage to ask questions, guides us toward deep learning.

  • Nature

    Nature—that ingenious, marvelous, elegant, ever-changing, resilient nature within and all around us—is our teacher.

  • Service

    Service is not a quota of hours to be checked off for graduation; it is a way of being that honors our common humanity and our interdependence with all life.

  • Projects

    Projects foster the complex, collaborative, and long-term approaches to problem-solving needed to meet the challenges of our modern world.

  • Imagination

    Imagination occupies that leap in the space between what is and what if? When rooted in relationship with nature and grounded in service, it makes possible the impossible.

  • Relationship

    From the tiniest atom to the entire universe, life is built on relationships. The health of our relationships—and our relations—is a reflection of the health of our world.

  • Experience

    In the age of information, if we ground our understanding in experience, we stand to gain something far greater than either information or experience on their own: wisdom.

  • Diversity

    Diversity is not a lofty ideal for the dominant culture; it is the underpinning of health, vitality, and resilience on our planet and in our cultures.

Interested? Space for Watershed Schoolhouse is limited. Please complete an application if you are interested in enrollment for the 2024-2025 school year.

Not sure? Join us at a community event.