Interested in enrolling for 2026-27?
It’s as easy as 1-2-3!
Read our one-page PDF that explains our co-op model and philosophy
Step 1
Complete the Scholé Hall enrollment process.
Step 2
Register for classes with individual teachers.
Step 3
Choose your volunteer pathway (available in summer 2026).
Family Investment
Scholé Hall Enrollment Fee
$25 per student per semester
Family cap of $75 per semester
Class Tuition (per student)
Varies
$700-900 per year-long course
$300-400 per semester course
Volunteer Commitment
8 hours per family per semester
($80 per semester buy-out)
FAQs
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The Scholé Hall enrollment fee in Step 1 allows us to pay rent for our beautiful space, as well as to provide extra funds for social and service events throughout the year.
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Our “farmer’s market” model allows our teachers to work as independent contractors. Scholé Hall is a cooperative community, not a “school” in the traditional sense.
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Volunteers help us keep the doors open! Our lease requires us to provide adult supervision at all times. Since teachers are teaching, we rely on families to take turns offering that support.
There are many ways to fulfill this commitment, including:
a four-hour shift, morning or afternoon, supervising the common spaces during Tuesday classes (siblings welcome, and you can work while you watch)
Organizing a social event or field trip on a day other than Tuesday
Helping students to plan and execute a hands-on service project
And we’re open to other ideas. Our goal is for everyone to feel invested in Scholé Hall’s students and success.
We understand, too, that life is complicated, so we offer an option to pay a small fee in lieu of this service.
Prep Step
(optional)
An ideal Scholé Hall student hails from a family committed to an ethos and habit of lifelong learning, where parents model a teachable posture in life as an example for their children.
If this isn’t your modus operandi at the moment, there’s no time like the present! Why not start now?
Consider doing some of the following as part of your prep as an educator next school year.
Take the Classical Education & Habits of the Household online course (it’s free).
Join a local Well-Read Mom Book Club (there’s one in Georgetown!)
Read at least one of these books:
The Abolition of Man, by C.S. Lewis
Beauty for Truth’s Sake, by Stratford Caldecott
Love What Lasts, by Joshua Gibbs
Leisure: The Basis of Culture, by Josef Pieper
You Are What You Love, by James K.A. Smith
Habits of the Household, by Justin Whitmel Earley