Two views of the same work — the five systems that organize learning across the universe, and the classroom stories, sorted by the age of the reader.
The org-chart view — the different education systems and how they’re used in this universe. This is the altitude a superintendent or district lead reads from: five real methodologies, each solving a problem the others can’t, none of them meant to become any of the others.
The mills closed; Tracy taught kids math at the kitchen table. Max 8 students, no state standards, 89% improvement at 3% the cost. Her daughter Luna ended up at the NSA.
The M. Splintons Learning Center — Bamazon package-tracking protocols adapted for humans. Anticipates the crisis before it happens; coordinates 50 families at once.
Immigrant teenagers build robots in the room where scientists split the atom. 94% job placement, $67K starting — the education bundle built for the kids nobody was building for.
Algebra taught through pitcher numbers on a car ride to practice. Treat kids as intellectual peers; anchor every domain to a child’s passion. The thread the user’s own name landed on.
Skills & Work Ethic Aren’t Taboo. Five rules on a card. HVAC in 18 months, $45–65K starting, ROI in 6–18 months. Honest manual labor as a career, named out loud.
Every interactive lab on the Opathorlokan campus — physics, method, business, engineering, the works. Where the five systems get put to the test, in the browser.
The whole geography package, ready to teach — read the water and the rock, and the cities strung between them. It’s built to be used a dozen ways: pull a syllabus off it, set a worksheet off one city, have the kids write a story about a place, or just research where a town came from and why the people settled there. Read the map, grade the map, and — the last click — name the map.
Waterways (the Mississippi corridor, the Northwest restoration, the Cumberland) and straight geography (the Line of Light, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Birmingham) — taught hands-on with SnapBasin, climbing to the Multi-Perspective History Lab.
The participation program — kids name the unnamed streams around their own school, verified and drawn fair, and watch the name stick on the real map. From reading the map to writing it.
The Arsenal corridor read as geography and history at once — how the rivers, the rails, and the roads decided where the work and the people landed.
How we teach history — one event read from many sides, and a place’s own record from the ground up. The deeper background a district or a higher-level student uses to put a topic in context.
The Monday-morning view — the stories written for kids, sorted by the age of the reader. Pulled straight from the network’s kids shelf. All-ages and older-but-safe reads sit up top; the themes get gently more grown-up as you go down.
“What I’ve done. Not where I’ve been.”