EPISODE · May 28, 2025 · 46 MIN
Michael Koska Launches Odyssey FM, an Acton Academy Micro School Redefining How Kids Learn to Lead
from The Fargo Five with Conrad Fargo · host Conrad Fargo
On this episode of The Fargo Five, Conrad Fargo is joined by Michael Koska, co-founder of FM Odyssey, an Acton Academy located in Moorhead, Minnesota. What begins as a casual introduction turns into a powerful conversation about the radical transformation of education—away from the factory-model school systems and toward something dynamic, personalized, and driven by the learner.Michael shares how FM Odyssey began with a simple yet world-shifting question from his wife late one night: “What if we started a school?” That question launched a two-year journey to create a micro-school built on the Acton Academy model—a national network of learner-driven schools designed to unlock autonomy, purpose, and character in young people. Drawing from his own background in education and software engineering, Michael embraced the idea and now serves as the full-time guide to the school’s inaugural group of eight students, with plans to grow steadily year by year.The episode dives deep into what makes FM Odyssey unique. It serves students ages 5 to 11 in two groups: Sparks (ages 5–7) and Discovery (ages 8–11), with mixed-age classrooms and a strong emphasis on personal responsibility and self-governance. The school day is structured around Socratic launches—thought-provoking questions like “How do you want to be remembered?”—that encourage students to think deeply and engage meaningfully. The learners vote on rules during weekly town halls, track their own goals, and work collaboratively to resolve conflicts. The environment is less about rigid oversight and more about coaching and accountability.Michael describes his role as a “guide” rather than a traditional teacher, helping to facilitate self-directed learning while minimizing adult interference. He emphasizes the importance of trust: students are empowered to manage their own progress, supported by guardrails like minimum time requirements in math and reading, tracked through software and community oversight. The result is a culture of integrity, ownership, and internal motivation.The conversation also explores the challenges and logistics of starting a school from scratch. Michael walks through regulatory differences between North Dakota and Minnesota, noting that Minnesota’s more flexible private school policies made Moorhead the ideal location. He shares how FM Odyssey was bootstrapped through grassroots outreach—hosting events, giving tours, meeting families—and how word-of-mouth has grown their visibility. He candidly discusses how the school serves both Fargo and Moorhead families, with no restrictions on crossing state lines for education.Together, Conrad and Michael explore the philosophical and practical implications of FM Odyssey’s model in an AI-driven future. They highlight how the traditional emphasis on memorization is obsolete, and that the power now lies in knowing how to ask the right questions. The school’s core principle—“Learn to Learn, Learn to Be, Learn to Do”—prepares students not just for tests, but for life. Michael explains how older learners at FM Odyssey are eventually encouraged to seek apprenticeships, write outreach emails, and build real-world experience that bridges the gap between education and entrepreneurship.Listeners also get a look at Michael’s journey—his work as a paraprofessional, his detour into software development, and his eventual return to education through a startup lens. FM Odyssey is not just a school; it’s a grassroots movement with big dreams and real community impact. Michael’s story demonstrates that it doesn’t take a massive institution to change lives—it takes vision, commitment, and the willingness to start small and grow with intention.
What this episode covers
On this episode of The Fargo Five, Conrad Fargo is joined by Michael Koska, co-founder of FM Odyssey, an Acton Academy located in Moorhead, Minnesota. What begins as a casual introduction turns into a powerful conversation about the radical transformation of education—away from the factory-model school systems and toward something dynamic, personalized, and driven by the learner.Michael shares how FM Odyssey began with a simple yet world-shifting question from his wife late one night: “What if we started a school?” That question launched a two-year journey to create a micro-school built on the Acton Academy model—a national network of learner-driven schools designed to unlock autonomy, purpose, and character in young people. Drawing from his own background in education and software engineering, Michael embraced the idea and now serves as the full-time guide to the school’s inaugural group of eight students, with plans to grow steadily year by year.The episode dives deep into what makes FM Odyssey unique. It serves students ages 5 to 11 in two groups: Sparks (ages 5–7) and Discovery (ages 8–11), with mixed-age classrooms and a strong emphasis on personal responsibility and self-governance. The school day is structured around Socratic launches—thought-provoking questions like “How do you want to be remembered?”—that encourage students to think deeply and engage meaningfully. The learners vote on rules during weekly town halls, track their own goals, and work collaboratively to resolve conflicts. The environment is less about rigid oversight and more about coaching and accountability.Michael describes his role as a “guide” rather than a traditional teacher, helping to facilitate self-directed learning while minimizing adult interference. He emphasizes the importance of trust: students are empowered to manage their own progress, supported by guardrails like minimum time requirements in math and reading, tracked through software and community oversight. The result is a culture of integrity, ownership, and internal motivation.The conversation also explores the challenges and logistics of starting a school from scratch. Michael walks through regulatory differences between North Dakota and Minnesota, noting that Minnesota’s more flexible private school policies made Moorhead the ideal location. He shares how FM Odyssey was bootstrapped through grassroots outreach—hosting events, giving tours, meeting families—and how word-of-mouth has grown their visibility. He candidly discusses how the school serves both Fargo and Moorhead families, with no restrictions on crossing state lines for education.Together, Conrad and Michael explore the philosophical and practical implications of FM Odyssey’s model in an AI-driven future. They highlight how the traditional emphasis on memorization is obsolete, and that the power now lies in knowing how to ask the right questions. The school’s core principle—“Learn to Learn, Learn to Be, Learn to Do”—prepares students not just for tests, but for life. Michael explains how older learners at FM Odyssey are eventually encouraged to seek apprenticeships, write outreach emails, and build real-world experience that bridges the gap between education and entrepreneurship.Listeners also get a look at Michael’s journey—his work as a paraprofessional, his detour into software development, and his eventual return to education through a startup lens. FM Odyssey is not just a school; it’s a grassroots movement with big dreams and real community impact. Michael’s story demonstrates that it doesn’t take a massive institution to change lives—it takes vision, commitment, and the willingness to start small and grow with intention.
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Michael Koska Launches Odyssey FM, an Acton Academy Micro School Redefining How Kids Learn to Lead
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