Current Programs
Current Programs
Full & Partial Fellowships Available by Application
Complete a fellowship application by 10 August, 2026, 11:59 p.m. Eastern.
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Saturday, 22 August 2026
10:00 am–5:00 pm Eastern
Live, online via Zoom
The Cost of Care is a live, online, scenario-based seminar for educators who work with young people inside and outside of schools. Through guided reflection, discussion, writing, practical scenarios, and attorney Q&A, participants will examine care, power, privacy, disclosure, adult responsibility, and the boundary moments that shape ethical relationships with young people.
The seminar treats boundaries as ethical practices of care, accountability, embodied self-awareness, and social change.
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Facilitated by Kamauru Johnson, PhD, Director of Counseling Support Services, Rye Country Day School, and Lisa Arrastia, PhD, Founding Director, The Ed Factory.
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This course may be eligible for graduate-level extension credit through our partner university. Contact us for more information about credit.
Public Inquiry as Liberatory Education: An Institute in Curriculum & Program Design for Teachers & Youth Workers
Live / Online
Dates / Times
Opening Sessions
Tuesday, 6 October 2026 / 6:00–8:30 pm EASTERN
Tuesday, 13 October 2026 / 6:00–8:30 pm EASTERN
Weekend Intensives
17–18 October 2026 / 11:00 am–4:00 pm EASTERN
24–25 October 2026 / 11:00 am–4:00 pm EASTERN
7–8 November 2026 / 11:00 am–4:00 pm EASTERN
14–15 November 2026 / 11:00 am–4:00 pm EASTERN
The Fall Institute includes 45 live instructional hours, with additional structured work outside the live sessions.
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Tuition
Tuition does not include graduate-level extension credit or any required books participants may need to purchase separately.
→ Discounted tuition: $395 through Monday, 31 August 2026. Use code FALLINSTITUTE26 at checkout.
→ Standard tuition: $495 beginning Tuesday, 1 September 2026.
→ Fellowship access: Partial and full fellowships are available by application. Full fellowships cover The Ed Factory tuition. Partial fellowship tuition is $225 total.
Fellowship Application Timeline / Complete the Application
Application due: Friday, 28 August 2026, by 11:59 p.m. Eastern
Decisions emailed: Tuesday, 8 September 2026.
Fellowship recipients must register by Friday, 11 September 2026, to hold their place.
Because scholarship spaces are limited, unclaimed awards may be offered to another applicant.
Additional reduced-rate access may be available when cost is a barrier. Please contact us to discuss options.
Payment plans are available through Tuesday, 1 September 2026. Participants may pay 50% at checkout, with the remaining 50% automatically charged one month later. After 1 September, tuition is due in full at registration.
Tuition supports 45 live instructional hours, course materials, project guidance, public product feedback, documentation for professional learning when needed, and the sustained preparation required for reading, listening, inquiry, curriculum design, and participant support.
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Institute Description
Public Inquiry as Liberatory Education is a live, online institute in curriculum and program design for educators working inside and outside of schools. The institute studies public inquiry as a liberatory education practice: a way of positioning young people to investigate the social, economic, political, cultural, and local conditions shaping their lives, and to design creative work that recognizes, records, and makes public—in every conceivable shape and form—what others have not yet seen, heard, or understood.
Participants will begin by developing their own public inquiry into a place they know: a childhood community, current neighborhood, school, workplace, or another place that has shaped their life. They will identify a question, study the conditions around it, listen to people connected to that place, and consider what creative public form could carry the inquiry beyond the institute.
From there, participants will design a public inquiry project for young people—one that begins with a strong guiding question, moves through investigation, listening, local research, skill-building, creative production, and revision, and culminates in public work young people can make and share.
The institute draws on liberatory curriculum and program design, critical cultural pedagogy, public inquiry, audioethnographic practice, descriptive review, writing, discussion, and creative production. Together, we will examine how Black, Brown, white, working-poor, and working-class young people are positioned by schools, neighborhoods, public policy, labor, housing, policing, language, family life, media, and local histories. We will also study how educators come to understand young people, authority, freedom, care, responsibility, conflict, and learning, and how those inherited understandings shape the curriculum and programs we build.
By the final session, each participant will have a teachable public inquiry project with a guiding question, core materials, listening or oral history practice, scaffolded experiences, formative assessment, and a public-facing form. The institute assumes that young people across age levels can notice, question, and interpret the world around them; participants will be guided to adapt public inquiry practices to the developmental age, setting, community, and responsibilities of the young people they teach.
The work may take shape as a photo-text essay, audio piece, exhibit, archive, community walk, publication, performance, installation, conversation, or another form suited to the question, the young people, and the setting.
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Facilitator
Lisa Arrastia, PhD, Founding Director, The Ed Factory
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Who Is This Institute For?
This institute is for K–12 teachers, progressive education teachers, new teachers, teaching artists, youth workers, after-school educators, summer program staff, and others designing learning with young people inside and outside of schools.
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Time Commitment
This institute includes 45 live instructional hours and requires additional structured work outside the live sessions, including reading/viewing, place inquiry, oral history or listening practice, curriculum/program design, peer feedback, revision, and final project preparation.
Participants should expect to work outside the live sessions throughout the institute.
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Action–Reflection–Action: Public Product Feedback
In small groups, participants will share their final public product designs with a panel of educators, families, and youth. The feedback will serve as the institute’s final reflection cycle and provide direction for revisions participants complete on their own after the institute ends.
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Learning Outcomes
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Experience
No prior experience with public inquiry, audioethnography, oral history, curriculum design, project-based learning, or youth program design is required.
Participants should come with an interest in education, young people, public life, creative practice, and the conditions shaping the communities where young people live and learn.
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Free Low-Tech Basics Tutorial, 22 September 2026 / 6:00-7:00 pm EASTERN
For those who want to become familiar with online learning and applications like Zoom, Google Drive, and shared Google files. First, register for the institute, then complete the Low-Tech Basics Tutorial registration form.
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Graduate-Level Extension Credit
Public Inquiry as Liberatory Education may be eligible for graduate-level extension credit for an additional fee paid directly to the partner university. The Ed Factory institute payment and graduate-credit enrollment are two separate transactions. Contact us for more information.
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“Learning about project-based learning and how to construct meaningful lessons has been very helpful. But getting at the ‘why we do PBL’ has really influenced my idea of what makes good teaching.”
“I thought we had to ‘trick’ students into learning, but now it’s clear what we have to do is give them meaningful work.”
“Creating the opening event and the ‘question that cannot be Googled’ helped me visualize my future classroom. It made me even more excited to teach my subject.”
“I had assumptions about why students may not participate, and I had not thought critically about why that might be the case. Through seeing students in the classroom and through our seminar conversations, I learned to see students in multiple dimensions.”
DATES
26 and 27 September 2026 / 10:00 am–5:00 pm EASTERN
3 and 4 October 2026 / 10:00 am–5:00 pm EASTERN
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TUITION
Tuition does not include graduate-level extension credit through USD or any required books participants may need to purchase separately.
→ Discounted tuition: $295 through Monday, 31 August 2026. Use code BRATFALL26 at checkout.
→ Standard tuition: $395 beginning Tuesday, 1 September 2026.
→ Fellowship access: 2 full and 2 partial fellowships will be offered by application. Full fellowship covers The Ed Factory tuition. Partial fellowship tuition is $150 total.
Fellowship applications are due: Friday, 14 August 2026, by 11:59 pm EASTERN. Decisions will be emailed by Friday, 21 August 2026. Apply for a Fellowship.
Additional reduced-rate access may be available when cost is a barrier. Please contact us to discuss options.
Tuition supports seminar instruction, course materials, guest honoraria when applicable, project guidance, and the sustained preparation required for close reading, reflective writing, and careful engagement with participants’ final projects.
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SEMINAR DESCRIPTION
Engaging the Brat: Rethinking Classroom Management is a live, online, project-based seminar for educators working inside and outside of schools. Together, we will reconsider what classroom “management” has often taught us to value: compliance, quiet, speed, order, and self-discipline. In direct contrast, we will study and practice a teaching approach rooted in relationship, attention, listening, imagination, and the dignity of every learner.
Through close observation, audioethnographic practice, reflective writing, and collaborative inquiry, participants will examine how classrooms are shaped by space, sound, time, language, power, memory, and the assumptions adults may carry about young people. Rather than beginning with the question of how to keep a classroom under control, this course asks different questions: What does a child need to be more fully seen? What conditions make social connection possible? What might teachers notice when they slow down before correction, discipline, or judgment?
The seminar title is grounded in Michael J. Carley’s essay “Engaging the Brat in Your Classroom . . . And the Power of Narrative,” along with readings and practices that help educators think more carefully about childhood, school memory, teacher authority, neurodivergence, and the stories adults tell about children. Participants will work with childhood photographs, school records, teacher comments, or related materials from their own lives in order to create a final project that revisits how children are described, judged, and remembered.
This seminar is for classroom teachers, teaching assistants, paraprofessionals, school counselors, instructional coaches, school leaders, youth workers, teaching artists, museum educators, after-school educators, community-based youth program staff, undergraduate and graduate licensure students, and adults interested in building more humane learning communities.
Participants may have the opportunity, by invitation and with permission, to have selected writing or final project excerpts considered for inclusion in the facilitator’s forthcoming book with Neurodiversity Press, Engaging the Brat.
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Facilitated by Lisa Arrastia, founding director of The Ed Factory.
Featuring talks with neurodiversity specialist and author of the personal essay inspiring the seminar, Michael J. Carley, and award-winning playwright Idris Goodwin, author of the YA book King of the Neuro Verse, one of the seminar’s required texts.
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LEARNING OUTCOMES
Review outcomes.
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EXPERIENCE
No prior experience with classroom teaching, audioethnography, narrative writing, or project-based learning is required, but an interest in facilitation, teaching, or learning environments is necessary.
Free Low-Tech Basics Tutorial on Tuesday, 22 September 2026
For those who want to become familiar with online learning and applications like Zoom, Google Drive, and Google apps. First, register for the seminar, then complete the Low-Tech Basics Tutorial registration form.
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GRADUATE-LEVEL EXTENSION CREDIT
Engaging the Brat in Your Classroom: Rethinking Classroom Management is eligible for 1-3 Graduate-Level Extension Credits for an additional fee of $79 per unit paid directly to the University of San Diego. Even if you are not currently on a unit-based pay scale, credits may benefit you in the future. If you switch districts or roles where credit-based salary advancement applies, having USD credit already earned ensures you’re eligible without delay.
The Ed Factory seminar payment and USD credit enrollment are two separate transactions.
Enroll in The Ed Factory seminar
Enroll with USD for academic credit
Learn more and register for credit with the University of San Diego.
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“I learned that education is about relationships and treating the students as people, not as subjects.”
“I really learned that human-focused teaching and relationship building are a significant part of the job. I feel as though I both practiced and witnessed this firsthand in the course.”
Prose Lab is a guided coaching space that uses writing as a site of inquiry, decision-making, and action.
Sessions may focus on an application essay, academic essay, chapter, publication draft, project, professional material, or another piece of writing. They may also use writing and narrative inquiry to help participants think through a work challenge, clarify direction, make a decision, or move with more purpose.
Together, we listen closely to language, sharpen ideas, strengthen prose when prose is the task, and build practices participants can return to after the session ends.
Begin with a free consultation. Paid sessions and packages are scheduled after we clarify your goals, timeline, materials, and context.
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Short-notice support may be available up to 48 hours before a deadline. Writers under 18 register with a parent or guardian.
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Image: Kei Scampa
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