You are not wrong to want more for your child

Raise a Dragon Slayer.

More and more parents are realizing the old model is not built for the kind of future their children are growing into. Get our free Info Kit and see how Chisholm Creek Academy helps learners grow in curiosity, character, and responsibility.

A different kind of school for families raising Dragon Slayers.

Maybe you already feel it.

Maybe you have felt it for a while now, even if you have had a hard time putting words to it. Your child is bright, curious, full of questions, and alive with energy, but the usual school path can feel too small for who they will become. What should be feeding their love of learning can start to flatten it. What should be building confidence can start to train passivity. What should be preparing them for life can begin to feel like practice in compliance.

You may be noticing that your child does not need more pressure, more noise, or more box-checking. They need challenge with meaning. They need room to think, explore, create, and grow. They need adults who believe they are capable of more than simply following directions and staying inside the lines.

You may also be noticing something in yourself. A growing sense that the familiar path is not necessarily the right one. A quiet suspicion that there has to be something better than a system built to keep children moving in neat lines while their curiosity slowly fades. A hope that school could do more than prepare a child to perform. That it could help shape character, courage, responsibility, and a real love of learning.

If that sounds familiar, you are not alone. Many of the families who find us started in exactly that place. They were not looking for something trendy or reckless. They were looking for a place where their child could grow strong, thoughtful, and fully alive. A place that could help raise not just good students, but Dragon Slayers.

Check out these Blogs & See if you too are Raising Dragon Slayers

  • Why We're Raising Dragon Slayers
    (and Why You Might Be Too)

  • The Book That Took Us to the Edge of the Map

  • Let Them Hear of Brave Knights

  • When Curiosity Isn’t the Problem

  • Our Hero’s Journey (a parent’s perspective)

What Makes Us Different

Most schools are built to keep children moving in neat lines: stay on pace, follow directions, memorize the right answers, and do well enough to move on to the next box. For some children, that works well enough. But for many families, especially the ones asking deeper questions, it starts to feel like something important is missing.

Because you are not just raising a student. You are raising a future husband or wife, a business owner, a parent, a leader, a neighbor, a problem solver. One day, your child will have to make hard decisions without a teacher standing nearby holding the answer key. You are raising a Dragon Slayer.

That requires more than academics alone. It requires courage, judgment, responsibility, curiosity, resilience, and the ability to think clearly, work hard, recover from failure, and keep moving when life gets difficult. We believe school should help children become capable human beings, not just successful test takers.

At Chisholm Creek Academy, learners are trusted with real responsibility. Instead of adults managing every detail, children learn to set goals, manage their time, solve problems, and take ownership of both success and failure. Traditional schools often produce strong rule followers, but life demands strong decision makers. We would rather help learners build that muscle now.

We also believe children rise when the work matters. Our learners engage in meaningful projects, real challenges, and work that asks something of them. They present ideas, defend opinions, build solutions, and wrestle with problems that do not have easy answers. They learn that effort matters, failure is not fatal, and excellence is earned. Dragon Slayers are not raised through busywork or participation trophies. They are forged through meaningful challenge.

Character matters just as much as academics, and maybe more. We care deeply about how learners treat others, whether they keep their word, how they handle responsibility, and what they do when things get hard. Kindness, integrity, courage, and humility are not side lessons. They are the work. The goal is not simply a smart child. The goal is a good human.

We believe education works best inside strong community. Our school is intentionally small, relational, and deeply connected. Families know each other. Learners know they belong. Parents are partners, not spectators sitting quietly on the sidelines. This is not a drop-off service. It is a tribe. And when you are raising Dragon Slayers, tribe matters.

We are also far less interested in asking, “Did they finish?” and far more interested in asking, “Did they grow?” Grades can create the illusion of learning without the reality of it. We focus on mastery, reflection, and real progress. Learners build portfolios, earn badges, present exhibitions, and learn to measure themselves against excellence, not just completion. Life does not reward people for checking boxes. It rewards people who can actually do hard things.

Our Guides are not here to perform learning for children. They are here to challenge, question, and hold up a mirror. We use the Socratic method because learners grow stronger when they wrestle with ideas instead of being handed conclusions. Sometimes that is uncomfortable. Good. Growth usually is.

We are not trying to raise children who wait to be told what to think. We are helping raise young people who can stand in the world, face dragons, and think for themselves. That is the difference.

  • "Chisholm Creek Academy is unique. When our learners begin to acquire knowledge, instead of cramming for the next exam, they take pride and gain confidence in finding themselves along their journey."

    Shelly Frank, CCA Parent

  • "From day one, it was clear that this school was something special."

    Ben Bench, CCA Parent

  • "All 3 [of our kids] have exceeded our expectations in their development this year. They are more responsible, learning how to manage their own goals and time/effort to achieve them, and gaining people/leadership skills that they didn't have as a homeschool family."

    Jason Thomas, CCA Parent

Frequent Concerns we hear

And our responces