Harmony Spring Show
Harmony School
www.harmonyschoolsc.org Inspiring Curiosity, Conservation, & Creativity
Harmony School is a small and affordable, non-profit, private preschool and elementary school tucked in the heart of Forest Acres. We are the only school in the state of South Carolina to offer a blended curriculum of Montessori, Waldorf, and Inquiry-based teaching principles.
It is with a heavy heart that we announce that Harmony School will close permanently at the end of the 2026 school year. After an exhaustive, roughly three-year search for a new location to house our program, we have been unable to find a suitable solution. Unfortunately, we are also not in a position to remain at our current location beyond this academic year. This decision was not made lightly, and we understand the impact it may have on you and your family and the community.
We are incredibly grateful for the trust you have placed in us to care for your children. It has been a privilege to watch them grow, learn, and thrive in our care. The relationships we have built with your families mean so much to us, and we will always cherish these memories.
Happy St. Patrick’s Day
02/18/2026
Our students had a lot of fun playing kindness bingo while being of service to family and friends.
02/13/2026
My son brought home a classmate who smelled like stale smoke and wore the same faded hoodie four days in a row.
My son, Leo, is nine. He came home on a Tuesday and said, "Mom, can Julian come over? He says his house doesn't have Wi-Fi, and we have that big social studies project due."
Julian showed up an hour later. He was a wiry kid with unkempt hair and sneakers held together by silver duct tape. He flinched slightly when I reached out to take his jacket.
"Are you hungry, Julian?" I asked.
He just nodded. He ate three grilled cheese sandwiches without once looking up from the plate.
While the boys worked, I noticed Julian didn’t have a backpack. He had his school papers tucked into a plastic grocery bag. His worksheet was filled with mistakes, but the paper was wrinkled from where he had erased and tried again a dozen times. He was trying so hard.
"Julian, would you like me to look over your answers?" I offered.
"My dad usually does it," he said softly, staring at the table. "But he’s... busy lately." The way he said "busy" made my chest ache.
Leo whispered to me in the kitchen later, "Julian’s dad is really sick, Mom. He doesn't come out of his room much. And his mom hasn't lived there in a long time."
The Red Flags
Julian started coming over every single day. He was always starving. Always polite. He never asked for a thing, but he looked at our pantry like it was a treasure chest.
One evening, 8:00 p.m. rolled around and Julian made no move to leave. He just sat on the edge of our sofa, staring blankly at the TV.
"Julian? Is your dad going to be worried about you?"
"He’s resting," he whispered. "He rests most of the time now."
The red flags were screaming. I drove him home that night. The apartment complex was dim, and his unit was freezing. His father, Ray, answered the door. He was rail-thin and had a cough that sounded like it was tearing him apart. "Sorry," Ray rasped. "I work a late shift... I have to sleep during the day. Julian knows the drill."
He was lying. There was no job. He was simply too ill to be a father.
I didn't call the authorities right away. Instead, I just started showing up. I brought over dinner because I "accidentally made a double batch." I offered to pick Julian up for school because "we were driving past anyway." I bought Leo new boots and coincidentally bought a second pair "in the wrong size—can Julian use them?"
The Spare Room
Ray finally broke down one Saturday afternoon. "Stage four lung cancer," he whispered, leaning against his doorframe. "No insurance. I lost the job months ago. I’m just trying to keep the lights on until... until I can’t. Then he goes into the system."
"What if he didn't?" I asked.
My husband and I aren't wealthy. We live paycheck to paycheck like most people. But we had a spare room.
Ray moved into our house two months ago. We set up a hospice bed in the downstairs den. Julian moved into what used to be my sewing room upstairs. It isn't a legal adoption. It isn't a state-mandated foster placement. It’s just... what you do when someone is falling.
Ray has very little time left. He spends his afternoons watching Julian and Leo play games from his bedside, tears tracing lines down his sunken cheeks. "He’s finally being a kid again," Ray whispers. "I thought I’d lost that for him."
Last week, Julian called me "Mom" by accident while asking for a glass of water. He turned bright red. "I'm sorry, I meant—"
"It's okay, sweetheart," I said, pulling him into a quick hug.
Ray saw it from the doorway. He squeezed my hand later that night. "Thank you," he mouthed. "Thank you for letting me stay long enough to know he’ll be okay."
The Lesson
I don't know what the legal battles will look like when Ray passes. I don't know how we’ll afford two teenagers in a few years. All I know is that right now, there are two boys doing homework at my kitchen table. One of them finally has shoes that don't need tape.
Sometimes saving a life doesn't require a cape or a grand speech. Sometimes it’s just an extra sandwich. A pair of boots. A spare bedroom.
Pay attention to the kid in your child’s class who wears the same clothes every day. The one who stays late. The one who is always hungry. You don't have to be a perfect person to help; you just have to be a person who notices.
And maybe, just once, make an extra sandwich.
02/13/2026
Inquiry based learning teaches children to seek answers to their curiosities and to be excited about their learning experiences.
02/13/2026
Happy Valentine’s Day
02/12/2026
Counting hearts today in preschool math
02/12/2026
Genuine understanding is gained through direct experience enabling knowledge to become embedded in the child’s spirit.
Our elementary students practice their Spanish by ordering at our restaurant.
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Address
3737 Covenant Road
Columbia, SC
29204
Opening Hours
| Monday | 7:30am - 5:30pm |
| Tuesday | 7:30am - 5:30pm |
| Wednesday | 7:30am - 5:30pm |
| Thursday | 7:30am - 5:30pm |
| Friday | 7:30am - 5:30pm |