2025 Impact Report

Starting small, thinking big.

We launched ReHuman School in August 2025—a four-person team working to honor thousands of years of Indigenous knowledge while creating real economic impact. This report shows where our tuition dollars went, who we employed, and what we're building toward.

01

Building the School

In 2025, we launched three courses with pay-what-you-can pricing. The school provided stipends to 11 Indigenous guest teachers to support curriculum delivery. Tuition also supported two full-time jobs and one contracting job for women of color. Students with diverse backgrounds from social work to agriculture to community foundations gained practical tools for regenerative efforts. This is education designed for impact, not profit.

“For tens of thousands of years, Indigenous peoples have demonstrated that humans can be a keystone species—one upon which entire ecosystems depend for their health."

Dr. Lyla June Johnston

$25,500 invested in biocultural restoration

Even with tuition for our courses being optional, students paid an average of $40/course, generating revenue for biocultural restoration.

11 Indigenous Guest Teachers

Tribal leaders, watershed specialists, food-organizers—all fairly compensated.

Female + Indigenous Leadership

Founded and led by Dr. Lyla June Johnston of the Diné Nation, with 3 women of color staff brought on board.

2,000+ students educated

2025 saw surprising enrollment rates with over 2,000 students registered for 3 courses.

02

Ecological Restoration

ReHuman was honored to partner in 2025 with the Appalachian Rekindling Project, resulting in $22,000 invested in bison restoration to Kentucky habitats where they had long since been extinguished. We were also happy to partner with Nihikeya Project to forward $3,500 for traditional hoghan construction. 100% of net proceeds fund Indigenous-led projects that restore ecosystems and revitalize cultures.


“Bison are more than animals—they’re relatives who shape the prairie, create habitat, and restore balance. Their return is our return to right relationship with the land."

From Becoming a Regenerative Human I

$22,000 Bison Rematriation

Supporting bison return to Indigenous lands through IINÁH Institute.

$3,500 Hoghan Construction

Funding a traditional Diné house and organizing center on the Navajo reservation

Growing Regenerative Community

122 ReHuman students advanced their localized regenerative projects through our growing network in service for Mother Earth.

Indigenous Organizing

We have gratefully interwoven collective action into our classes to support political pressure towards restoration and social equity.

03

Where Proceeds Go

After modest staff wages, every dollar from course proceeds supports both the school's growth and Indigenous-led restoration work. We're building infrastructure to scale while ensuring the majority of funds go directly to communities doing the work.

ReHuman exists to be in service to life as a giving force for humans, non-human relatives, and future generations.

ReHuman Mission

$13,000 School Infrastructure

Tuition reinvested to refine ReHuman processes—new website, course contultants, operations.

100% Net Proceeds Invested

After modest staff wages, every dollar funds Indigenous-led restoration and revitalizations.

Pay-What-You-Can Model

Suggested $40-$60. No one turned away for lack of funds.

Annual Reporting

We’ll publish yearly spending reports showing exactly where proceeds go.