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Founder's Message

The Curious Academy has been a dream of mine since I was sixteen years old.

Over the years, what that dream looked like has changed — but the heart of it never has. I have always believed that children deserve equitable access to meaningful, high-quality education, regardless of their economic background, learning style, diagnosis, or life circumstances. No child should feel disadvantaged, unseen, or “not good at school” simply because the system wasn’t built with them in mind.

My background in education — from project-based learning to early childhood development — showed me something that traditional systems often overlook: how children learn matters far more than what they learn. I became increasingly concerned watching young children enter school academically capable, yet deeply unprepared to regulate emotions, navigate social relationships, or feel confident in themselves. These are not “extras.” They are essential life skills.

As a teacher, I shifted my focus away from academic rigidity and toward social-emotional development, behavior support, and whole-child growth. I saw firsthand how many children were at risk of being mislabeled, ignored, or lost in larger systems — not because they weren’t capable, but because their needs didn’t fit a narrow definition of success.

The Curious Academy was created to be different.

This school was built to honor children as individuals. To meet them where they are. To create learning experiences that adapt to the child — not force the child to adapt to a system. Whether a student thrives with hands-on learning, movement, creative exploration, quiet focus, or structured independence, TCA is designed to support that uniqueness rather than suppress it.

Our days are intentionally structured to support development: multiple opportunities for play, movement, rest, connection, and exploration. Learning is guided by curiosity, student interests, real-world experiences, and inquiry-based units, while academics are individualized, mastery-based, and engaging.

The most important measure of success at The Curious Academy is simple:
Does each child leave school feeling safe, happy, and confident?

If a child leaves believing they are not smart, not capable, or not valued, then we have failed them. School should never diminish a child’s sense of self.

TCA exists to fill the gap for families who want more from their child’s school experience — more humanity, more flexibility, more joy, and more purpose. Children are our future, and they deserve learning environments that give them the strongest possible foundation to thrive — not just in school, but in life.

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Molly Heemer, M.Ed. 
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