There are so many reasons parents consider alternative programs for their children. I’m not talking about special education schools today, I’m talking about alternative programs that have the freedom and flexibility to offer out of the box schooling. While not specifically designed for students with disabilities, sometimes the nature of such programs (small classes, individual attention, smaller building, project based learning, nurturing environments, etc) allow them to meet the needs of the individual child as well as those of the larger group.
Today we are meeting with Lockey Coughlin, founder and director of Education Without Walls, an alternative program in New Milford, CT. Lockey is a homeschooling parent whose journey with her 3 children through their schooling (all are off in college now!) led to the creation of an alternative program for middle and high school students located in the historic down town of New Milford, CT. Lockey talks to us about how Education Without Walls came to be, what it has turned into, and the students who go there – because it is always all about the students.
Education Without Walls (EWoW) focuses on interest-based classes whenever possible and, despite a well-established program, Lockey is always open to and excited about new ideas and interests from the children. EWoW has a new building this year, right off the green in New Milford just steps from the historic down town. The location is perfect because EWoW incorporates the downtown into their campus utilizing many of the resources found just within a stones throw. Lockey ensures all children at EWoW feel heard, safe, and part of a community. In addition to critical academics and an outdoor program, students learn critical thinking, problem-solving, and social skills that they will need to prepare them for college and life.
TRANSCRIPT (not proofread)
SUMMARY KEYWORDS
homeschooling, kids, students, college, education, children, classes, parents, people, school, program, public school, world, bit, find, professional dancer, phones, connecticut, walls, talk
SPEAKERS
Lockey Coughlin, Dana Jonson
Dana Jonson 00:03
Hello, and welcome to need to know Dana Jonson. I’m your host, Dana Jonson. And I’m here to give you the information you need to know, to best advocate for your child. I’m a special education attorney in private practice, a former special education teacher and administrator, a current mom to four children with IPS. And I myself have ADHD and dyslexia. So I have approached the world of disability and special education from many angles. And I’ll provide straightforward information about your rights and your school’s obligations, as well as tips and tricks for working with your school district. My goal is to empower you through your journey. So there’s anything you want to hear or comment on YouTube by me and this podcast at special ed dot life. You can also find me on Instagram at special ed dot life. Or you can email me, Dana at special ed dot life. Now the first thing you need to know is that sometimes I have a bit of a potty mouth. So if your environment isn’t ready for that, feel free to pop in your earbuds. Okay, let’s get started. So today we’re going to be talking about alternative schools. And before we get into that, I want to be really clear about what we are not talking about which there is a term alternative placements that pertains to public school settings. And if a child is disciplined and potentially dangerous, the schools allowed to move them for up to 45 days to an alternative placement. I want to be really clear that is not what I’m talking about. What we’re talking about today are more non traditional school programs. So programs that are not necessarily accredited private or public schools in the state of Connecticut, those kinds of schools fall under the homeschooling laws. If you’re not in a public school or a private accredited school, it is homeschooling. So and there’s no definition of homeschooling. So you get a lot of different definitions from different people and what they do. But specifically what I’m talking about are programs that are built in Connecticut, they fall under homeschooling, but their actual school programs. And today we have a great guest to talk about this Locky coghlin no Hello, and lackey is the founder and director of education without walls in New Milford, Connecticut. She is also the founder and president of Webb Youth Services, which is a nonprofit, which I’m going to ask you to talk about in a minute. And also a founding board member of Rebuilding Together in Litchfield County, which keeps elderly people and disabled children and low income families in their homes and helps fix up the homes. I guess you do that in all your spare time. Yes, yes. Yes. Okay. All your free time. And she’s also a contributing columnist to the Greenwich Sentinel in their education series. So Locky? Yes. Tell me about education without walls.
Lockey Coughlin 03:10
Okay, well, it’s a long story.
Dana Jonson 03:12
Okay,
Lockey Coughlin 03:13
let’s start with my children who I homeschooled from when they were very little and began as a co op,
Dana Jonson 03:21
a cooperative. I should also say I’m gonna interrupt you and say that Locky also has three children who are doing very well in college and pursuing their own individual careers. Yes, I
Lockey Coughlin 03:32
can brag about them all day long. Yes.
Dana Jonson 03:34
I talked about my kids all the time, but
Lockey Coughlin 03:36
they Yes, they’re doing very well. But I started homeschooling them when they were very young. My youngest daughter actually never went to a traditional school. So we did what most homeschool moms do, which is we we joined co ops or cooperatives in the homeschool world, where a bunch of families and moms get together and then they teach classes to each other’s children based on what they are good at and what they enjoy doing. So those you should meet once a week, maybe twice a week. If they’re really ambitious. It’s usually younger children, because homeschool kids tend to go on to more traditional schools when they hit ninth grade. And my understanding too is when children are homeschooled more traditionally, I guess, the amount of time that needs to be dedicated towards academics is not the same as if you’re in a classroom full of 25 kids. Yes, that is correct. Well, co op. The only academics that homeschool students have it’s an opportunity to get together with a bunch of other kids and learn other perspectives and have other people teaching your children homeschool is a misnomer. We joke about that a lot in the homeschool world. Because we spend very little time at home people tend to rage and the kids getting up and sitting at a desk in the morning and staying there all day. That is absolutely not what happens. There’s a lot of visits to museums. There’s a lot of visits to Other people’s homes for five days, there are classes that people put together all the time that have a bunch of kids going and having a guided tour where they’ve hired someone at a museum trips to the city, that kind of thing. So it really is a misnomer, people.
Dana Jonson 05:16
I know, that’s always the first thing I hear when someone says homeschooling The very first thing is, well, my kid needs to be socialized. So I couldn’t do that. Right. And I think well, why are these kids at home locked in their bedrooms? Right?
Lockey Coughlin 05:29
Yeah, you giggle about that. Actually, we used to get about it a lot. Because most of what they do is socializing.
Dana Jonson 05:38
Like, you can’t stop them. No, no, you can’t
Lockey Coughlin 05:41
stop them. kids want to be with other kids, right, and they will push their parents for what they really need. And so they’re in their parents. Entire objective in homeschooling is to give their children what they need to have a happy and well educated life, and to be well educated and informed citizens of the world. I truly believe that that’s why people homeschool. So they listen to their kids, they have conversations, and if their kids need to be with other kids there, they will be vocal about it. Man. I’m sure everybody knows that less kids. Yeah. And ask them what they want you at home.
Dana Jonson 06:14
So when did education about walls come about? How did that start? And because it’s a full program now it’s it’s middle school and high school. And high schoolers can get transcripts and accreditation for their classes. It’s not an accredited school. But you can get that for them. Correct?
Lockey Coughlin 06:31
Yes. So yes, very often, I wonder how, how this happened. It happened very organically grew up on its own. So we started with the one day a week Co Op, the place where we were meeting, which was great hollow in new Fairfield closed because they were trying to sell the property. And I was kind of done. My kids were in middle school, I was ready to do something different with them. And I wasn’t going to do a co op anymore. But a lot of the members really wanted something. So I said, Okay, I have this crazy idea for just taking over the town of New Milford one day a week. That’s it. And I know I know a lot of people in New Milford and the library here is incredible. We use New Milford on Fridays, it was Friday as New Milford, fine line Theatre Arts loaned us space. The village Center for the Arts lodo space, the library, let us use space, we would go see movies, at the Bank Street theater, and I just love this town. So it’s a great walking town, lots of great restaurants. So we did not have a space of our own, which is normally coasts, rent space and church and right. But it was incredibly successful. So we hired professional teachers to teach things like biology and French and calculus. We had maybe 1010 kids. And then I had an art teacher who was losing her space that we were using her quite a bit in town. And I wasn’t willing to part with her. So I finally decided to rent space around it seemed like a huge deal at the time. 1000 a month, I was like, I don’t know if I can do this. Yeah. But I had a lot of support from the other people in the group. And we just did it. And then we rented more space that was attached to that space, and then more space. And eventually, we had over 40 kids. And it really just grew from there. I had people asking for more programming things that were not necessarily the same age range as my children, which is where my folks had been, of course. And that’s when we added schoolers, mostly for siblings of people who were already in the program. Yeah. And then it just sort of grew and grew and grew. And now I own a building and in New Milford a lot of full time kids, and it’s, we’re looking at doing college programming here, which is very exciting. And my kids are not here anymore, which is weird, right? This is my first year without them here. So
Dana Jonson 08:44
do you think you would continue it after they went to college?
Lockey Coughlin 08:48
You know, I wasn’t sure it’s a lot of work. It’s a huge commitment in terms of your time and energy. And, you know, parents are, can be tough sometimes. So sure, but it’s so gratifying. And watching the kids grow is so gratifying. So I really just couldn’t walk away.
Dana Jonson 09:04
Yeah, no, it’s great. And in full disclosure, I have three children in your school, which I love very much I love. So we came to the homeschooling world through we were not homeschoolers, I was actually an active anti homeschooler for a long time. And then yes, I was, I was, you would not have liked me very much. And, but we got to a place where the public school is not working for my son at all. And we found ourselves in a bit of an emergency situation and we had not budgeted for private school. And we found ourselves in the homeschooling world in in a facility that did homeschooling programs, and that was my introduction to it. And I recognize that we needed a little more structure. That’s what I needed because I’m no longer a teacher. And I have a full time job, so I didn’t have time. I’m more the ability to be on top of their programs, which is how we sought you out, and why they are here. My son ended up with mental health issues that he couldn’t go to the public school anymore. And so the program that they’ve offered for him is a therapeutic School, which would be great. And he would do well there. But we found that this environment being much smaller, and by the nature of the program, not that there’s any form of special education, yes, but the fact that it’s small classrooms, individualized for the student, yes. Do you do have a an animal play therapist who comes twice a week? Right? Thank you. I just learned it, I just learned the whole term animal play therapist, and she’s wonderful. So that is also another benefit. And then my other two really just wanted to be somewhere different. And it really wasn’t a quote unquote, need thing. I get that a lot too. Why did why did they need to go? My what what was wrong? What was wrong with them? So when you get people who come to you, when I came to you at all three kids, were looking for all three of them. So but when parents come to you, and they say I’m looking at your school, what do you hear? What Why? What are the reasons that people come to education without walls?
Lockey Coughlin 11:17
There’s so many reasons. One is because they’re looking for something that’s a little more academically challenging for their children in a small classroom environment where their children really have a voice. And we have students who come because they suffer from anxiety, which is really prevalent right now. Yes, it’s so sad. They, they really just can’t function in school, because they’re anxious about, you know, their safety.
Dana Jonson 11:42
And well, and in my field, we go through waves. So you know, when I first started practicing, as an attorney, I had a ton of autism cases, because there was a lot going on with that back then. And then there is a phase where I had a lot of dyslexia cases, it just suddenly they all kind of came up. And I’m finding that in my practice, that the vast majority of calls I’m getting right now are mental health related. And there’s often other components to that. For children with learning disabilities, particularly girls, if they’re not properly programmed for they turn into emotional issues by the time they get to high school. Yes. And so, but I’m seeing a lot of that in my practice right now.
Lockey Coughlin 12:20
Yes. Well, I talk about it on two different levels with parents when they’re coming in. One is the there’s a lot of bullying that goes on. Yes, obviously, in the school system that
Dana Jonson 12:31
really isn’t properly addressed. We have in Connecticut, we do have laws, which is good and better than some states, but there’s no right of action. There’s no teeth to it, it just says we can’t do it. You know, you shouldn’t bully, which is great for awareness purposes, but we’re not following through.
Lockey Coughlin 12:51
No. And it’s it’s incredibly difficult for educators in the public school system to follow through on that. There are so many areas in a public school environment where there just really isn’t enough supervision.
Dana Jonson 13:05
There can’t be, you know, just not
Lockey Coughlin 13:07
capable. Yeah, it would be too expensive, right. And it’s just it would require a huge amount of staff. Mm hmm. So an environment like this, where you have an adult within hearing range everywhere, is really helpful. So that it’s never Well, hopefully, we’ll never get to the point where it’s even bullying. It’s just an unkind word. So the adults on site can say, Hey, would you like it? If someone said that to you, or pull the child aside who may be saying something that’s not very nice and have a conversation about it? That’s important that it needs to be taken care of in the moment. You have to keep it from escalating. It’s a very difficult thing to address. Yeah. So you spend all your time doing that is that I spend a lot of my time doing that. Yes, Yes, I do. Especially with middle schoolers, because short tend to be very dramatic. Everything is larger than life was middle schoolers. Yeah. So and that’s another thing I talked about a lot. Parents don’t realize what their middle school students that it’s normal for them to really turn into a mess when they hit middle school age. So I very, very rarely talk about age range. I talk about things that you look for
Dana Jonson 14:18
developmentally right. In a student and when you say when you’re looking at a student, how they present in the classroom, where they are developmentally that sort of, thank you developmental markers, developmental markers.
Lockey Coughlin 14:30
So you look for things developmentally, with students, when they really forget, start forgetting what you told them 15 minutes ago, and they they turn into really hot mess. They’re really disorganized. They can’t remember things. That’s normal. So a lot of parents come to me and say, what’s going on? Is it the school system? Is it my child? Is there something wrong? No, there’s nothing wrong. This is a very normal developmental stuff that they’re taking. And the reason is they’re going there. Moving from in terms of their brain development, memorization and imitation into really coalescing all of the information they’ve gathered so far, and trying to make their own decisions. So in that effort to make their own decisions, they will ask a lot of questions, they will get very sassy, very normal and familiar with the SAS. And realize this is a very normal, yeah, mental stage. And they feel a lot of relief around that. We try to sort of beat it out of them, I think a little bit in public schools, you have to do what you’re told, don’t talk fast. And in line, you know, all of that stuff. Here, we allow for a little bit more freedom for the middle schoolers, when they begin to really think about what they have to do for tomorrow, and plan maybe a little bit ahead, then they’re ready for high school work. And then we talk about high school, sophomore year, the middle of sophomore year, they started to get a little bit more interested in their academic feature.
Dana Jonson 15:58
Yeah, that’s what I’m waiting for. Yes.
Lockey Coughlin 16:03
And then halfway through this, and that’s wonderful, until about halfway through their senior year when they get senior itis and they’re kind of done.
Dana Jonson 16:09
Yeah, so one of the issues that I had, which I didn’t realize I had, but as I’m learning more about alternative schools, and we call it alternative schooling, because whenever I say homeschooling immediately, if somebody isn’t in this world, their perceptions of whatever that is, comes to the forefront of their head, and that that’s what I’m doing. I’m at my kitchen table, teaching my kids how to do stuff, which is not at all what we’re doing. So that’s why we always say they’re in an alternative program or an alternative school. And you know, what I mean by that is non traditional. But what I realized and what I what I saw lacking in my children’s education, was learning how to problem solve, and critical thinking. And I think that those are two really key pieces that kids today need to know, they no longer need to learn the name of Christopher Columbus’s ships, right, they need to understand invasion of an indigenous country exploration, all those components that come with it. And I was seeing my children memorizing learning for one specific task. And then once that task was over, whether they’d mastered it or not, they were on to the next. Yes. And that wasn’t working for me. So when you have kids come in here, do you feel like there is what age typically do people come to you? Or is it all ages? Do you have Middle School, you’ve basically whatever middle school age work is, through high schools,
Lockey Coughlin 17:38
we say very mature 10 year olds, which really means the ones that are ready for middle school, right? And they, you know, they need to be mature and able to follow the rules year, which is behind and really do, we don’t have a lot of rules. I don’t like to have a lot of rules, because I want the kids to think for themselves. Yeah. And to problem solve around issues that come up. And we do a lot of meetings. So a mature 10 year old up to 18, or 19, if they want to do a PG year, we’re offering post college university programs, great. What ages typically do people enter education without walls, like when parents call you do you find it’s mostly beginning middle school, middle of high school, it’s like 1112, okay, 1112, they come into the middle school program, when we have new students for the high school program, it’s generally the end of freshman year with a middle of sophomore year, I try to make it work. And this is what you see is that they give the middle school about a year and a half, they give the high school about a year and a half. And they really try to figure out a way to make it work, that’s when they are going to the specialist getting IEPs by befores, right? That kind of thing. And then that takes time to develop and to figure out that it’s not going to work. Right. So that’s about a year and a half,
Dana Jonson 18:54
it takes them as I was saying with my son, you know, when he’s in the public school, he can’t function he can’t get in the building. He comes here. And we don’t have an issue with that. Right? So do you find that the nature of your program is what works for kids? It’s not that you have like a specialized, specific,
Lockey Coughlin 19:14
yes, saying that, what what it is, is that it’s individualized for each child. So and the child has to have the student, the learner has to have a buy in? Yeah, so we have conversations with the parents and the students and ask the student, what do you like? What do you not like? What classes do you want to take? What time would you like to arrive? You know, we can’t accommodate all of their requests, right? Seriously, when they request things, and they appreciate that they see that they’re respected, and that their opinion is important to us. And so we, you know, we try to accommodate them. Yes. So I think it’s the individuality and that we acknowledge that they’re individuals. We do have a lot of school refusal. Kids come in, yeah, they walk in the door. They have a first meeting with me and they can’t wait to Start.
Dana Jonson 20:00
Yeah, that’s awesome.
Lockey Coughlin 20:03
Because they want to learn. And that’s the thing they want to learn. If they don’t refuse to go to school because they’re lazy or because they don’t want to be there, they refused to go to school because they don’t feel safe there. And that’s the other thing I talk about all the time, which is Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, which is what a lot of our model is based on, if they don’t feel physically safe, and can usually say, Can you explain that? Sure. Oh, sure. Maslow’s hierarchy of needs and its hierarchy, which is in the form of a triangle, and the base of the triangle for a human needs, his physical needs, obviously, you need to be well fed, you need to be warm, you need to have clothing, you need to have a home, those are your physical needs, you need to have water. And I talked to the kids about it all the time, when you’re hungry. What are you thinking about, you’re not thinking about, you know, what your the Civil War happens, you’re thinking about I need to eat. So this is this is the basis of our philosophy here is that their physical needs have to be met, but we always have food, there’s always food. And they’re allowed to eat in class and, you know, take care of themselves physically, and then they have to feel mentally safe. That’s the next thing. They have to feel like, someone isn’t going to be saying to them, you’re dumb and stupid, I can’t believe you don’t know that. And then that includes their peers. Teachers, apparently, have said this to students that I’ve heard of recently in the post school will call them stupid. That makes me crazy. I hear
Dana Jonson 21:29
that all the time. And I hear that all the time. So many times parents come to my office, and half the story is how a teacher spoke to their child. Or recently, I had one where, you know, when the mom found out from another parent who was in the classroom and overheard it, this other mom called her and when she talked to her son, he’s like, well, I don’t want to get anyone in trouble. So this kid had been listening to this all year long. And the mom is watching him spiral without any concept of what’s happening. And then to turn out that whatever the phrase was the teacher was using for him. It was just chipping away at him the whole year.
Lockey Coughlin 22:07
Yeah. And that’s just astounding to make unconscionable. It really is. I can’t imagine someone put who’s in that position, making a child feel that way. Because like I said, they feel emotionally unsafe, and then they cannot focus on anything else other than, are they going to say to me again, today, am I going to feel stupid today? Somebody’s going to call me dumb. And then they try to mask it?
Dana Jonson 22:31
Yeah, I know, My son was very cognizant of, if other children were ahead of him. So I can only imagine if somebody spoke to him that way, who was in a form of authority? That would have been, you know, we would have been here sooner. Yeah. But you know, because I know that kids are very, they’re looking at what is everybody else doing?
Lockey Coughlin 22:53
They want to fit in?
Dana Jonson 22:54
Yeah, of course, they want to be the same. Yes. They’re trying to find their path while trying to be completely different at the same time,
Lockey Coughlin 23:00
while trying to stand out.
Dana Jonson 23:01
Yes, exactly. Yes,
Lockey Coughlin 23:03
we find that actually, we have a pair of twins here. Yes. They, you know, it’s Yeah, elevated with with twins, because they want to separate from
Dana Jonson 23:09
each other.
Lockey Coughlin 23:10
Yes. But they’re genetically, you know, the same. exactly the same. makes it even harder. Yeah. So that’s Maslow’s hierarchy of needs me. So after that, we can focus on education.
Dana Jonson 23:21
And then well, and I guess it would be in this environment, you have the staff, you have the time you’re here, when some one comes in from public school and isn’t used to this environment, and they’re trying to find their way. And then you have the time and ability to pull them aside to set up an extra class if they need it, you know, do all those kinds of components. What are some examples of maybe some outside of the box things that you have done with students to help accommodate them?
Lockey Coughlin 23:51
Well, I think the most outside the box thing is our ISP program. identically anyway, which is independent study project. So we allow students to get credit for work that they’re doing outside of education without walls, which is a very homeschool thing to do. And they need to present us with some kind of evidence of the work that they’re doing a paper or a video or, you know, photographs, a presentation. It’s done in colleges quite a bit. But we give credit for that here. And that really is amazing for some of our students. And your son, for example, is amazing, collaborative storytelling program that he’s running here.
Dana Jonson 24:34
Yes. been very successful. Yes. And I know there’s another student who’s going to be running a business. Mm hmm. So that sounds amazing. And middle school students and middle school students, no less. Yes. I mean, imagine being in seventh grade and having your own business.
Lockey Coughlin 24:48
Yes. And having a community that supports that. So yeah, we have, you know, all of the parents donating things for this kid to do research on he’s gonna have to, you know, if there’s history and There’s math involved, there’s, you know,
Dana Jonson 25:03
well, as somebody who just went through my own business model, I know it’s not an easy task, you know, it might sound a little easy, like, Oh, he’s gonna sell stuff. Yeah. But I know that behind the scenes, I know what you’re asking for from the student, which is a business plan, a proper projection, all of those components. And that’s a lot, there’s a lot involved in that
Lockey Coughlin 25:24
it is a lot. And he definitely, like I said, he needs help from the community. So we’ll have a high school student, of course, who’s assigned to help him and a parent who’s assigned to help him and he can always come and talk to me about it. But he has a lot of time to put into that it comes along with strings as your ticket. So this is something that I talked to the kids about a lot, this is your ticket, to get to where you want to be. And that actually they understand that they get that, that it’s currency. So you need to go to math class, if you want to continue with your ISP program.
Dana Jonson 25:55
So that’s very much an alternative way of looking at education, which is figuring out where you want to be. And then backtracking Yeah, and saying, okay, here are the steps I need to take. And it’s very entrepreneurial perspective as well, sort of towards education. It is.
Lockey Coughlin 26:11
So definitely, as I talk to you about keeping doors open. So my goal is always to keep as many doors open for the students as possible, while allowing them them to make a goal for themselves. Because it doesn’t really matter what the goal is, if they have a goal, and they’re working towards that goal academically, it will be with skills that they’re learning that they can apply to other things. So it doesn’t really matter what the goal is, because the goal is going to change. And as an educator and as a parent, we all need to understand that the student who thinks they want to be a professional dancer, for example, that’s the goal, it’s kind of unlikely that that’s going to happen. That’s, that’s a very odd circumstance where they actually make it to sure that they’re looking to get to. So we we support the goal. As parents and educators, we support students who want to be professional artists, or who want to be professional dancers, or actors or whatever it is, they need to take classes, they need to go to shows they need to go to rehearsals, they need to have the grit to get through whatever it is that they need to do sort of keep books on that goal. And those are skills that they will be able to apply to anything.
Dana Jonson 27:22
Again, that goes back to I think the problem solving in the critical thinking and the grid, as you just said, that they need to develop.
Lockey Coughlin 27:30
Yes, those are all things that they need to develop.
Dana Jonson 27:33
The next question I always hear is, what about college? How can they go to college? They’re not in school. Right? Well, right,
Lockey Coughlin 27:41
we for homeschool.
Dana Jonson 27:45
Let me just throw every stereotype at you. And I’m gonna have you speak for the entire homeschooling world.
Lockey Coughlin 27:53
Okay, so for homeschoolers, homeschooling parents actually have to put together I joke that they should get a PhD for doing it. It’s really like a dissertation, they need to provide a lot of information for colleges, colleges want to see what books their kids read, they want a small paragraph of every single class, everything that you’re giving their child your child credit for.
Dana Jonson 28:16
And you do that outside of education, without walls, right? you consult with parents to help them do that? I
Lockey Coughlin 28:21
do. I do. And I’m always happy to do it. I do it for free. Okay. And so because and I went through it with my children, I know how difficult it is really, it’s just a matter of pointing them in the right direction, because homeschool parents are used to doing things on their own. Yeah, they’re highly motivated. And they’re generally pretty organized. So although they will never tell you that they’re organized. But they are generally pretty organized. So I’m happy to help with that we have before we began offering accredited classes and transcripts. We had kids who came here, you know, and but they also did other things, because they’re home schoolers. So they take classes here, they go to other things. kids go to Cornell, Connecticut College, a really, really top notch schools. I never had a student who came to education without walls, who didn’t go on to some kind of post secondary education. So we really stressed that I feel like a college degree is absolutely essential in today’s world is not a master’s degree. Yeah. So we do stress that quite a bit. However, it’s never pushy, right? We may push that on students, they need to come in their own time in their own way to the idea that college is a good thing for their future. Well, so be part of that goal, right? It’s their ultimate goal.
Dana Jonson 29:34
But guess what I find really interesting when you talk about someone who wants to be a professional dancer, typically, you don’t get to have all those experiences. If you’re in public school or any traditional school, you can’t miss a week of school to go try out or rehearse or do something like that. You don’t have that flexibility. So you’re waiting until your career age to try it. It Right? And then if you’re at that age and it’s not working, then you have to make a huge change. So,
Lockey Coughlin 30:07
yes. So how does that play into it? Well, this is my daughter. Yeah, who wants to be a professional dancer and my other daughter who wants to be who is in music theater right now she’s just finishing up her BFA for musical theater. So I have great experience with this. And that’s one of the reasons why we call it a program for kids who have pre professional aspirations. So we had students here who were racecar drivers. Oh, God, I mean, they they didn’t drive actual race cars. But I mean, that was their goal. It was, well, and they were, they did race, they just raced in for what you know. They can’t go go karting
Dana Jonson 30:43
yet. They really look like, yeah, they’re serious.
Lockey Coughlin 30:46
50 miles an hour, it’s very, very serious stuff, they would go to Italy. So and pre pre professional gymnast, obviously, the dancers. So what we allow for those kids is time away from class, and they need to do the work when they’re on the road. And it’s very flexible. And then we talk about that a lot. Obviously, we have already that it’s flexible, it’s individualized. We create the academics around what the child needs, not around what we think is appropriate for re diploma.
Dana Jonson 31:17
Great. Well, and I think that we don’t give kids enough credit. I mean, I hear a lot of it without any direction kids aren’t going to do anything. If we don’t tell them what to do. They’re not just not going to do anything. And I don’t see that. Now. I don’t see that here.
Lockey Coughlin 31:32
Although there’s an issue with addiction to electronics.
Dana Jonson 31:36
Well, that is that is that is an issue. That’s it’s new. I mean, yeah, definitely a new hurdle that parents and educators need to overcome. And if you don’t give them unlimited access to their electronics, then you will definitely see them branching out and they will want to do other things. Right. So I mean, that’s a good point, because technology is here, it’s here to stay. It’s not going anywhere. It’s a lot of reason why I think the education system needs to change. Because when I was growing up, you had to learn these facts. Like very specific, I didn’t have Google on my phone, right? I just had my high school reunion, and I, my math teacher from high school, I took out my phone, I looked at him and I said, I have a calculator, and I carry it with me everywhere I go, which is what he told me would never happen. He used to say it all the time. You’re not gonna be walking around with a calculator as an adult like that. Right here. But so how do you balance that? Because sometimes I hear parents say, Oh, I’m totally anti technology. And they’re very proud of the fact that their children aren’t using it. And I think but that’s not our world anymore. And you’re
Lockey Coughlin 32:47
not educating your child appropriately, right.
Dana Jonson 32:49
Like my goal for my kids is, by the time they leave for college, they should be able to sleep with their phone in their room without being up all night. Yes, that’s like that. That’s a process we’re going through with our kids
Lockey Coughlin 33:02
go to college, you can’t control what’s going on with their phones. Exactly. And do that themselves. Right.
Dana Jonson 33:08
So how do you balance that here with technology and all the benefits of it, but without kids just sitting around on their phones all day,
Lockey Coughlin 33:17
for the middle school students, they are asked to turn in their their devices at the beginning of the day. And then we have our morning meeting. And then they get them back at the end of the day, which is you know, it’s sort of like a an 830 to 330 day for them. detox. Yeah, it’s a little bit. It’s amazing, though, to watch what happens during their breaks, because they are not on their phones, or on their devices. They are playing games, we have a huge library of board games. And they and puzzles and yeah, puzzles, they pull up, there’s always a puzzle out. It’s Yes, you have to have a puzzle out all the time. And it’s amazing the conversations that have been over a puzzle, because they don’t have to look at each other, they can stay on for a moment and focus on the puzzle and take a second to breathe and think and it’s really amazing. It’s fun to watch. When we do allow them to have their phones over lunch occasionally, if that ever happens. Or if you go downstairs after 330 when they all have their phones, they’re not talking to each other. They’re all on their phones.
Dana Jonson 34:19
What I find really interesting is you don’t lock them up. They’re actually they have they could go access them if they want if they were really motivated to go take it. They could go into the room where they are. And beyond it quickly. But you don’t see that.
Lockey Coughlin 34:35
No, absolutely not, which I find interesting. I respect the they respect the rules. And that’s part of what education without walls requires is that we need to have students here who respect what the rules are. So they don’t always do it immediately. Right. They come here but they understand through their interactions with their peers and all of the adults on site that this is the rule and this is what is effective. And then the peers encourage each other they do. It’s it’s part of the culture. So right. You know, they become colorized. Yes to education without walls. And so there’s a book that’s actually called a culture eyes, okay? Which has a similar sort of way of looking at helping children to follow the rules and do what they’re expected to do with the negative consequences that come along with not doing
Dana Jonson 35:24
those things. Well, one of my children singing about a student who is new at some point and saying that something they were doing that was like, annoying, say, and then they followed it, but you know, they’re new to this school, so they just need some time to get to adjust. And I almost fell on my chair. I was like, What? Okay, then let’s give them time. And you say yes. Okay. So it was just it was interesting to me. I, one of the things I was asking you about was college because, you know, the two main questions when you say homeschooling are, how do they have friends? And what do you do about college? Right? And so you were talking about the transcripts, and going on to post secondary. So when you have parents come here, who are non homeschoolers is I’m guessing that’s the first thing they ask. In fact, I think it might have been one of my first questions a word about college, how did they get there?
Lockey Coughlin 36:15
So um, colleges really like to see students who do things differently. The key is to help an admissions counselor to sort of put it in perspective or in relation to what all of the other applicants have done and are doing so that it feels measurable to them. And that is part of filling out the common app and or your applications, appropriately answering questions. Well, talking to your admissions professionals, a lot of people don’t think that that’s a good thing to do to call up the admissions counselors or colleges, but they have assignments they have some colleges have admissions counselors who are only devoted to homeschooling intercepts, all they do to land for example, really, yes. homeschooling in New England, they have someone designated for that specifically, yes, talking to them is a wonderful thing to find out how much they know what they want to see. They’re always happy to answer your questions. It never ceases to amaze me how open and warm and welcoming admissions counselors are into colleges and universities. So definitely call them and ask them questions. I just booked someone the other day from South Carolina, who was a little bit confused about one of our students applications, and he’s assigned to Connecticut. Oh, interesting. Yeah, really nice guy,
Dana Jonson 37:37
when I was looking into homeschooling, or that this this alternative schooling world, you know, that was one of my main questions, you know, what do we do about college? And one of the things I learned in my research was that freshmen are dropping out at an alarming rate right now. Mm hmm. And that one of Yeah, one of the main reasons is a lack of time management. Yes, because they’re so overbooked, and their parents are so managing their schedules, that when Yeah, then when they get to college, it’s the college Cliff that they fall off of, and what they’re finding, and now that we have more information and more data on it, are the ones who aren’t failing out are the homeschoolers. Mm hmm. Because the most of them have been managing their schedule, and their education and whatever else they’re doing themselves. Yes. And I was actually at a conference the other day where it was, it was specific to something else. But what one of the college counselors said was, if your child is in eighth grade, and they do not get up on their own, complete any and all hygiene routines, take any and all medications they need, and get out the door on time without any assistance from you do not send them to college. They should start do they should be able to do that by eighth or ninth grade, which I think is insane. But that’s just me and my kids. That might say more about me than it does this college counselor. But she’s saying that, you know, that carries over because they don’t suddenly learn that skill. Yeah, it doesn’t happen overnight, because you put them in the right situation.
Lockey Coughlin 39:15
Yes, it’s definitely something that is is has to be learned. It’s interesting. One of the things that we do the senior year here for our students is really prep them for college. That’s not one of the things it’s all we do. Yeah, or the real world. But mostly, we’re prepping them for college. So they complain very often about the writing class, for example, we write a paper every week. And it’s that’s what they have to do. Because when you’re in college, try to paper every week, usually. Yeah. And the reason we do that is because I have talked to students who have come from education without walls, and have been in college for a few years. And I asked them, What could we have done differently? How could we have prepared you better? And one of my kids said, What writing I wish I’d written more. So we have At the writing class, a lot of what we do is give them freedom. Like you were saying it’s very important. So they have the freedom to leave if they want to. They are expected in class when they’re on site, but nobody’s really checking to make sure or going to get them if they’re not right in class. So they really need to manage your time, right? appropriately, they can leave the building to go and get lunch or go for a walk or go play basketball at the park, whatever it is, but then they have to be back for their class friend, they know it. So that’s actually it has been really, really good. It’s nothing that we did to prepare them specifically for college, but it happens to have it’s just the nature of the program.
Dana Jonson 40:39
Again,
Lockey Coughlin 40:40
once again, yes, it’s just the nature of the program. As a matter of fact, my son, who is just started college this year, finds it very restrictive, because there he is not okay, with the restrictions on his education.
Dana Jonson 40:53
He was telling me that he said, Yeah, I don’t have the autonomy that I want
Lockey Coughlin 40:58
to pick his own classes. So he is very upset at how strict they are. He wants to take certain classes, and he can’t take certain classes until he’s taken other classes. Right, you know, that kind of thing. So he’s, do you find that
Dana Jonson 41:10
some schools are more accommodating to that than others? Or is that the nature of kowski, where he
Lockey Coughlin 41:15
happens to be right now, is extremely structured. If you go to school like Hampshire, for example, the Atlantic, those are very unstructured and much more similar to perhaps what a unschooling homeschooler might be looking for. Tucker would want something in between. Okay, so we’re looking for maybe a better fit for him for next year. But he’s still doing great. And he still straight A’s? Yeah, really well. So as you know, my all my kids, and all the kids who come from education with that Well, so far, yes. And have done extremely well in college. So
Dana Jonson 41:50
that’s great. Now, I was talking to some of the students who had back to work as interns. And I always ask that when I when I meet a kid who’s in college or going to college, who’s been homeschooled and universally I hear no, I felt prepared.
Lockey Coughlin 42:04
You know, I love it when you come back. Yeah, I love it. It makes me so happy.
Dana Jonson 42:08
I think it’s great for the other kids too, because they get to see what’s next. You know, they and they get to reconnect with those students and see where they are. And it sort of gives them that. You know, I think a lot of kids don’t know what they don’t need to know what’s next. But I always say you need a plan to deviate from a plan.
Lockey Coughlin 42:29
That’s right. Right. If you
Dana Jonson 42:30
don’t have a plan, it’s just chaos. Yes. But if you have a plan, then you can change your plan. Yes. You have to start somewhere.
Lockey Coughlin 42:37
Yes, absolutely. And the changes happen, like we talked about before keeping doors open, having a goal. Right, and changing that goal regularly. It requires a lot of conversations. But yeah, yeah, it’s wonderful when those kids come back from college. And it gives them you know, I mean, they can look at us and say, Oh, you know,
Dana Jonson 42:55
right, but we’re the parents and were the adults and
Lockey Coughlin 42:58
they don’t they’re not interested in now. We weren’t teens. Now. They are like you don’t understand.
Dana Jonson 43:04
Yeah, exactly. Very often we don’t right up until my mother started telling them all the stories about when I was a team that that started changing a little time, but yeah, good. Good January here. But okay, well, I really, really have enjoyed this. And I feel like we’ve covered a lot I do want to get back to and just talk a little bit about your other passions, and projects. So the Rebuilding Together, I found fascinating.
Lockey Coughlin 43:29
Yeah, so a little about that Rebuilding Together. We started in 2001. And it is a national organization. We are a local affiliate. And the mission is to keep low income families and elderly individuals and veterans in their homes. So we will go to a person they need to own their home. Because like I said before, we’re not, you know, fix it the landlord’s house. So we go and we replace windows and we redo roofs and put in handicapped bathrooms and handicap ramps, whatever it is that’s needed for them. They apply through social services. I think we’ve done over 400 houses now. Wow. So yeah, that was my mother’s baby. She was the executive director, she passed away over the summer. And so we’ve all had to sort of hop in and take a little bit more of a of a role with Rebuilding Together which we’re counting but it’s it’s very gratifying. That’s awesome. And tell us that web Youth Services Yes. It was also inspired by my mother. She has her whole life sort of adopted troubled teens and taking care of them and so and really helped them to lead very successful lives so amazing. We wanted to start with you services in her honor. It’s a lot of what I do here. I definitely not as good at it as she was She’s incredible but I’m so with you services is designed As a not for profit to get money to kids who need it to help them overcome whatever their anxiety or mental health issues are. So if they feel that dance classes will help them with their anxiety or their mental health issues, then we can pay for dance classes, yoga, art classes, mental health services, education, without walls, whatever it is that they’re requesting, we would like to be able to help
Dana Jonson 45:26
them. And that’s such a huge need. Now,
Lockey Coughlin 45:29
it is a huge need. I think a lot of people don’t understand really how a child’s mental health guests mental health services are very important. seeing a therapist short, any psychiatrist obviously. But having some kind of activity outside of school is also incredibly helpful physical activity, press enter, getting them outside, in the sunshine, these things and having them in a location where they’re with kids who have similar likes and dislikes and who are interested in the same things, swim team, whatever it is, rowing doesn’t matter. I
Dana Jonson 46:06
think a lot of that is coming to the forefront. Now I know 10 years ago, in my practice, when parents wanted Aqua therapy or equine therapy, or play therapy, or whatever it was, it was sort of considered really out there. And crazy. And you know, but now I think I’m seeing a lot more understanding around the benefits of this types of activities and programs for kids and how much that does help with the mental health component?
Lockey Coughlin 46:34
Yes, yeah. It’s It’s so important. It’s It also provides them with strategies, coping strategies that they can utilize the rest of their lives. So I talk a lot about, you know, if you’re, if you’re taking dance classes or yoga classes when you’re 13 1415. Okay, you’re going to continue doing that through your adult life. Right. And it’s an easy thing to do. You don’t have to join a team. You don’t have to, you know, find a volleyball team or whatever to join, right.
Dana Jonson 47:01
You don’t have to spend a lot of money if you’re a habit Exactly. Just go take an art
Lockey Coughlin 47:05
class or go take a dance class. They’re
Dana Jonson 47:06
everywhere. And it’s wonderful. For their Do you find that? Because I don’t know, there’s my theory, and I’m just pulling it out of the air. So I think kids are so over scheduled to get to college, that they don’t have time for those things. You know, we’re reducing the arts in school. We’re reducing the fun after school programs. We don’t have fun camps. We have coding camp and reading camp and math camp. Yeah, you know.
Lockey Coughlin 47:38
Yeah, I yes, I agree that that’s a little crazy. My kids when they were in middle school had two full days at an outdoor education program for homeschoolers to flies. And they did a lot of academic type things when they were out in the woods, you know, they identified plants, they talked about botany, they talked a little bit about chemistry, biology, of course, that kind of thing. survival skills, building fires, but it was really, really good for them. It’s makes me sad that a lot of kids don’t get outside at all now.
Dana Jonson 48:10
Yeah, I
Lockey Coughlin 48:11
feel like it’s so important. I had them do that with other people, because I was too much of a nervous Nellie, like you’re gonna. So I need someone else to sort of take them out in the woods and really, really have a good time with them. So I feel like that helped to mold them into the humans that they are today, who still love to be outside and still go for a walk as
Dana Jonson 48:35
well. And now we have a lot of science around the fact that if you’re in your office all day, and you need to take a break, take it near a plant, take it near a tree, try to get outside, you know, 15 minutes a day outside in the air just sitting there. Yes, those things, create positive, whatever it is that your body creates, and dopamine and it helps you focus it helps you get back on track. It helps you organize your thoughts that to just have that time. And you know, they say if you can’t get outside, you know, where are the plants? Yeah, that kind of thing. Even just that can help. Yes. Having your screen savers be all nature related that all those things,
Lockey Coughlin 49:17
actually having a lot of plants helps people to feel more relaxed. In any room. Yeah. Anyway, yeah, no, we incorporate that into our program. So we have the kids go out for a walk. We have our morning walk and stretch. For the middle school program. They have a nice long lunch. They are encouraged to go and play basketball outside and Yeah, go for walks. So that’s great. Awesome. I feel
Dana Jonson 49:40
like that’s and then just the last thing I wanted to talk about was you’re also a contributing columnist to the Greenwich Sentinel. Yeah, you write further education series. So is there a specific theme that they follow? Or is it the Sentinel is a?
Lockey Coughlin 49:57
Yes, it’s one of the papers in Greenwich. They have decided to really focus on education on a regular basis, not just as a once in a while thing. So they have requested that area heads at school to make columns once a month, okay, they went around to all of the private schools in the granite area, and ask them to do this though columns are incredible. I love it. They have a page devoted to education every single week. So they came to me as an alternative to the private school or the public school. So not necessarily as a homeschooling parent, but right and but as sort of a different perspective. Yeah, so I get to write for them once a month. It’s really exciting. I love I didn’t think I would, but I really love seeing what I’ve written in print. I yeah, we read it 100 times.
Dana Jonson 50:48
No, it’s great. It really is. And I love that they dedicate so much time to education in their publication. So if anyone’s interested in looking at education without walls, how do they find you online
Lockey Coughlin 50:59
educationww. org. Okay, we use not three, I always put in three, WW. And our just call, and we can always give a call 860-350-3006. I’m here pretty much all the time.
Dana Jonson 51:17
And I’ll have all that information in the show notes too. So if anyone didn’t have time to write that down, go back to the website. And I’ll have all that information there.
Lockey Coughlin 51:27
Thank you so much, Dana. Excellent. Thank
Dana Jonson 51:28
you Lackey. I really appreciate it. Thank you so much for joining me today. Please don’t forget to subscribe to this podcast so that you get notifications whenever new episodes are available. You can also find this podcast on his website at special ed dot life. You can follow me on Instagram at special ed dot life or you can email me at Dana at special ed dot life. I want to know what you want to know. So please reach out with your comments and questions. And I’ll see you next time here on need to know with Dana Jonson Have a great day