single mama starting small school in the south
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Re: single mama starting small school in the south
meganblossoms wrote: ↑Thu Jan 11, 2018 10:20 amOne thing that somewhat confused me in reading through the responses was the sentiment that I'm "too late in the game"--as I mentioned, I'm looking to facilitate a very small scale alternative learning project, <25 learners maximum, including my own kids, and I'm not seeking to turn a profit. It's hard to imagine that the sentiment of being a day late to the competitive private education scene fits in this scenario.
10 years ago starting a school was easy, fewer requirements, costs were lower, fewer options for students, local officials were more open to barangs doing this kind of thing
All of those things have changed to varying degrees
If you were doing this in 2000, or even in 2008, most would encourage you, I think.
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Re: single mama starting small school in the south
I've met some great yanks here, I think we need more.
Not so sure about the Brits, LOL
Re: single mama starting small school in the south
or the Aussies, LOLthat genius wrote: ↑Fri Jan 12, 2018 5:58 amI've met some great yanks here, I think we need more.
Not so sure about the Brits, LOL
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Re: single mama starting small school in the south
Aussies are shop-soiled Brits
Re: single mama starting small school in the south
Yep. we sent the religious nutters to US and the criminals to Australia. That just left the idiots behind and its been all downhill since
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Re: single mama starting small school in the south
Whereas the Americans are pure bred!that genius wrote:Aussies are shop-soiled Brits
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Re: single mama starting small school in the south
Except in the Appalachians where they are allegedly all pure inbred according to DeliveranceBarang chgout wrote: ↑Fri Jan 12, 2018 7:24 pmWhereas the Americans are pure bred!that genius wrote:Aussies are shop-soiled Brits
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Re: single mama starting small school in the south
I agree with Arget that it's best to spend a few months learning the place before you start immediately.
Kampot is much much cheaper than Sihanoukville now and also much more stable as Sihanoukville is literally being torn apart by the Chinese as others said. (I.e. the first aircon room I asked in Kampot cost 8 dollars, while in Sihanoukville there was nothing under 20). A passive income of 4000 usd is excellent in Cambodia, especially Kampot, you'll easily be able to
rent a larger building there which can function both as your home and school. Don't go for low end, establish a normal comfortable lifestyle, otherwise
you and your kids may end up hating your life and that will cause you to give up. Too late? Ridiculous, Cambodia needs all the help it can get, and now
it's at a level where you can actually have a comfortable life while helping locals, so it's a great project.
Do maintain a legal entity in the US, so you have the option of getting grant money, etc, for the school or future projects you may establish,(i.e. make sure US citizens who donate can tax deduct their donation). You're going to have to figure out your pricing because the locals will not understand that you teach some for free while charging others - there's no way for you to know their incomes either, so the sliding scale won't work. Best to have a fixed price for everyone, but set up a separate foundation that pays for the poor kids, so they don't have the impression you're discriminating.
Contact people specifically who are in the field,
and I'm sure you'll get much better advice than here. Good luck!
Kampot is much much cheaper than Sihanoukville now and also much more stable as Sihanoukville is literally being torn apart by the Chinese as others said. (I.e. the first aircon room I asked in Kampot cost 8 dollars, while in Sihanoukville there was nothing under 20). A passive income of 4000 usd is excellent in Cambodia, especially Kampot, you'll easily be able to
rent a larger building there which can function both as your home and school. Don't go for low end, establish a normal comfortable lifestyle, otherwise
you and your kids may end up hating your life and that will cause you to give up. Too late? Ridiculous, Cambodia needs all the help it can get, and now
it's at a level where you can actually have a comfortable life while helping locals, so it's a great project.
Do maintain a legal entity in the US, so you have the option of getting grant money, etc, for the school or future projects you may establish,(i.e. make sure US citizens who donate can tax deduct their donation). You're going to have to figure out your pricing because the locals will not understand that you teach some for free while charging others - there's no way for you to know their incomes either, so the sliding scale won't work. Best to have a fixed price for everyone, but set up a separate foundation that pays for the poor kids, so they don't have the impression you're discriminating.
Contact people specifically who are in the field,
and I'm sure you'll get much better advice than here. Good luck!
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