>>150932183
None that I'm aware of have ever done it properly. Even most homeschools are not up to my standards, but there is definitely a way.. it would need to combine like...
>a focus on book-learning (not actual books, obviously. websites/documents on a computer)
>tutors available to explain the very complex concepts / premade videos by smart guys like this BPRP Math Basics guy I just discovered
>a near, but not complete, lack of structure. A focus on 'your time is your own, until the moment you're summoned, then you hop to it' rather than 'sit and focus for the next 8 fucking hours until we say otherwise'
>access to food and exercise all day long
>access to other kids a couple times a week for play
>a strong focus on playing-IS-learning rather than trying to make learning fun (follow Mister Rogers' example)
>and a bunch of other shit i've forgotten, but much smarter people than me have suggested. like, there's a way to do testing that is completely alien to how we do it, and infinitely more successful. And like, if motivation is ever an issue, rigging things up like videogames where you get incremental but tangible rewards for sticking to the work. and obviously spanking if they're ever fully defiant, but that is for like, low single digits only.