"Your Degree"

In Community Colleges, Colleges and Universities students pick a major. It might be Biology, Human Sciences, Engineering or even Business in general, or with a concentration in a particular aspect of business like Accounting, Finance, Marketing, etc.

The curriculum they study would include core curriculum from their "department" or "school" or "college" (yes, there are things like schools within colleges and colleges within universities in this modern system gone awry).


A "well rounded education" as defined by the school, college or university to obtain a College Degree in a given Major will include curriculum from the "college" or "school" related to the Major as well as other non-related departments, schools and/or colleges" from within a University. The non-related school curriculum is considered supplemental or may have been part of "electives" that were allowed to complete a total number of classes for the degree.

At Krump Academy, the "degree" one would be pursuing is a degree in "Commerce". It would be most similar to an Associates, Bachelor's or Masters Degree in Business depending on your depth of study, but it would completed in far less time and with far greater emphasis on tools and skills needed to manage a household or a small business. The key focus in our curriculum is to provide the Business Understanding needed to survive and even thrive in a modern, commercial society if a corporate job is NOT of interest to you. (The current business programs are all geared towards education for Corporate Employment, although that is not clearly conveyed).

A "Degree in Commerce" is needed by all who intend to manage a personal household of their own and those who intend on owning their own business. and that pretty much covers all but those dreaming of solitary homelessness, and even they could benefit from this one way or another.

We do not refer to our curriculum structure like the colleges, because we are not a College. We don't have any departments or "schools" within our College and you get no "degree" other than the one you bestow on yourself.

We use the term "Channel" to refer to the different "lines of curriculum" that we offer. When combined, we feel these provide a student with a well rounded understanding of Commerce that has immediate application in everyone's life.

We have a "Foundational Channel" also referred to as our Commercial Literacy Channel. That has 4 subchannels. We currently have 3 "Advanced Channels" and we expect to add more down the road.

Foundational Channel (aka the Commercial Literacy Channel)

    1. Bookkeeping Literacy

    2. Accounting Literacy

    3. Financial Literacy

    4. Technology Literacy

Advanced Channels

  1. Website Building

  2. DIY Software

  3. Business Best Practices

If you wanted to make a comparison to current College Degree Programs, here's one way to think about it...

  • Once you have achieved Commercial Literacy, you have earned your "Associates Degree" in "Commerce".

  • Once you have obtained sufficient proficiency with all the Advanced Channels, you would have earned your "Bachelor's Degree" in Commerce.

  • If and when you combine all of this with a profitable household or a profitable small business, you would be deemed a "Master of Business" (MoB)

In this context, our goal is to proudly assist with the
Global Growth of a MOB of MoBs.