A lot of people talk about changing education. Whereas, Rayna has spent years doing the real, behind-the-scenes work of making alternative education real, accessible, and tangible for families.
She’s deeply entrepreneurial, but not in the flashy sense. She thinks in systems, communities, and long-term resilience. She’s someone who doesn’t just imagine better ways of doing things. She actually builds them because she has a strong builder’s mentality. She doesn’t simply consume systems. She creates them through homeschooling programs, co-ops, educational structures, workshops, books, community events, and nonprofit initiatives.
She’s unusually comfortable operating outside mainstream paths. Homeschooling, micro-schools, umbrella programs, self-publishing, and hybrid education models all reflect her willingness to question institutional defaults instead of automatically accepting them. At the same time, Rayna is very practical. She thinks about sustainability, logistics, operations, and real-world execution.
That combination is rare.
She’s visionary enough to imagine alternatives and grounded enough to run them. Her writing carries that same spirit, offering encouragement and reassurance while inviting readers to think more critically about modern education.
Much of her work centers on creating spaces where families feel supported, included, and empowered.