Power Homeschool (Acellus)

Power Homeschool is a video-based online curriculum for grades PreK-12 powered by the Acellus Learning Accelerator. It features pre-recorded lessons from certified teachers, adaptive learning technology, and automatic grading at $79-99 per month per student.

What Is Power Homeschool?

Power Homeschool is the parent-led homeschool version of Acellus Academy, using the same video lessons and adaptive technology. Students watch short (under 10 minutes) pre-recorded lessons taught by certified teachers, then complete assessments. The platform automatically grades work and tracks progress through a parent dashboard. When students struggle, the system identifies knowledge gaps and provides targeted remedial instruction. The curriculum is secular and aligns with national standards.

Key Takeaways

  • Video-based instruction with automatic grading—minimal parent teaching required
  • Covers PreK through 12th grade with 300+ courses available
  • Uses adaptive "Prism Diagnostics" to identify and address learning gaps
  • Monthly subscription: $99/student ($79 with scholarship program)
  • Not accredited—Power Homeschool does not issue diplomas

How It Works

Students log into the platform and watch video lessons—short segments focused on single concepts. After each lesson, they answer questions to demonstrate understanding. Master the concept, move forward. Struggle, and the system provides additional instruction through "Vectored Instruction" that retrieves and reinforces prerequisite material. Parents access a comprehensive dashboard showing grades, time spent per lesson, attendance records, and printable reports. The platform handles grading entirely, freeing parents from assessment duties.

Pricing

Strengths

Power Homeschool excels at independent, video-based learning. Teachers are generally engaging—many reviews call them "outstanding" and "encouraging." The adaptive technology genuinely helps identify and fill knowledge gaps. Short lesson segments suit students who struggle with sustained attention. Automatic grading and comprehensive record-keeping save parents significant time. The secular, standards-aligned curriculum works for families wanting non-religious academic content. Special education accommodations include closed captioning and text-to-speech.

Limitations

Power Homeschool is not accredited and does not issue diplomas—you're purchasing curriculum, not enrollment in a school. Science courses lack full lab activities; high school biology may not qualify as a lab science for some colleges. Math courses reportedly lack cumulative review, potentially affecting long-term retention. AP course preparation may not fully cover exam free-response sections. There's no teacher to contact for help—parents are on their own when students struggle. Some users report technical glitches and customer service challenges. The recent price increase from approximately $25 to $99 monthly has frustrated existing families.

The Bottom Line

Power Homeschool works best for self-motivated learners who thrive with video instruction and need minimal parent involvement in teaching. The adaptive technology is genuinely useful, and the comprehensive record-keeping simplifies documentation. However, at $99 monthly per student without accreditation or diploma, it's a significant investment in curriculum alone. Consider whether you need the accredited Acellus Academy instead ($150+/month) if official transcripts matter for your goals.

Frequently Asked Questions

Power Homeschool is curriculum only—you teach yourself. Acellus Academy is an accredited online school with official transcripts and diplomas. Same video content, different structure and price. Choose Academy if you need accreditation; choose Power Homeschool if you just need curriculum.

John Tambunting

Written by

John Tambunting

Founder

John Tambunting is passionate about homeschooling after discovering the love of learning only later on in life through hackathons and working on startups. Although he attended public school growing up, was an "A" student, and graduated with an applied mathematics degree from Brown University, "teaching for the test," "memorizing for good grades," the traditional form of education had delayed his discovery of his real passions: building things, learning how things work, and helping others. John is looking forward to the day he has children to raise intentionally and cultivate the love of learning in them from an early age. John is a Christian and radically gave his life to Christ in 2023. John is also the Co-Founder of Y Combinator backed Pangea.app.