![]() ![]() (The percentage CC received varied due to discounts given families with multiple children enrolled.) On two occasions, CC’s cut was as much as 33% to 60% of a director’s total revenue. Of that, CC received 100% of registration fees ($55 to $145 per student for younger students) as its “licensing” dues, and 12% of tuition fees collected for each 7th- to 12th-grade student per semester. When averaged, the directors collected about $20,000 in tuition and fees during a school year. The rest came from Carol Topp, a certified public accountant based in Cincinnati, Ohio, who received the data from five other CC directors for a book she wrote. Some data came from two directors interviewed by The Roys Report. The Roys Report also obtained data regarding annual program-related income and expenses from seven directors for their years with CC-from 2012 to 2018. Several were reluctant to speak on-the-record because CC had required them to sign a non-disclosure agreement. Some were tutors or directors of local programs others served as CC area or state representatives. Over several months, The Roys Report interviewed eight former CC contractors across six states. In state after state, it’s a story repeated with only slight variations about CC. Evangelicals: A Biblical Critique of a Wayward Movement” by Constantine Campbell. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Jesus v. She took in thousands of dollars in registration and tuition fees from parents-a hefty percentage going to CC corporate-but her income was nearly nothing. Parents who responded to her pitch were shuffled off to nearby local CC chapters. ![]() ![]() The local chapter never grew, despite her skill at networking and selling the program. With 14 years of prior teaching experience, she easily recruited mothers of school-age children to the CC program, which met weekly in a local church.īy her third year, Bothur began to think she was set up to fail. She worked six months as a tutor, and over five years as director. Starting in fall 2013, Kristi Bothur, a mother of two children who earned a master’s degree in curriculum, spent six years working with a CC chapter in Columbia, South Carolina. Meanwhile, CC is taking in millions in what whistleblowers and insiders allege is a multi-level marketing (MLM) scheme. Yet according to analysis by The Roys Report, local directors make next to nothing working for CC. (CC) bills itself as a leading faith-based homeschool education company that enables homeschooling parents, upon being contracted as local CC directors, to make extra income while providing an important local ministry. ![]()
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