Education as It Was Meant to Be:

Nurturing Potential, Building Leaders

welcome to apogee engage

At Apogee Engage, we believe education should be an active, engaging, and empowering experience for learners of all ages. Our unique approach centers around hands-on, project-based learning that nurtures curiosity, creativity, and critical thinking. We partner with homeschooling families to create a supportive environment where every learner can thrive—building not only academic knowledge but also life skills and a strong sense of responsibility.

We operate as a homeschool support center, not a school. Families who choose to homeschool their children are the legal supervisors of their child’s education and register accordingly with their local school district. Apogee Engage offers resources, mentorship, and learning experiences to enrich that journey.

We offer three Studios designed to support learners at each stage of development:


Ignite Studio (ages 5–7) sparks curiosity and creativity through hands-on experiences.

Engage Studio (ages 7–12) emphasizes critical thinking, collaboration, and personal exploration.

Elevate Studio (ages 13–18) helps teens refine skills, explore passions, and prepare for leadership and life beyond school.

Our campus supports growth for the whole family, not just children. Founded by Abby Allman and Bob O'Donnell, our community challenges conventional education by emphasizing mentorship, physical wellness, family involvement, and curiosity-driven learning.


We are guided by the principles of the Apogee Code—a set of ethical values including integrity, bravery, compassion, honesty, politeness, honor, and loyalty. These values create an environment where every person contributes to building a better, more supportive world.

At Apogee Engage, our goal is simple yet profound:


Do good things. Be good humans.

Join us in redefining education—where learning is driven by curiosity, creativity, and community, and every family is empowered to thrive together.

THE PHILOSOPHY

GET INSPIRED

“It is hard to fail, but it is worse never to

have tried to succeed.”

–Theodore Roosevelt-