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Christian Classical Education: History and Core Concepts (with Christopher Perrin and other presenters)

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  1. LECTURES

    Lecture 1: Introduction to Scholé
    7 Topics
    |
    1 Quiz
  2. Lecture 2: Homeschooling Parent as Guide
    3 Topics
    |
    1 Quiz
  3. Lecture 3: Learning to Love What is Lovely
    2 Topics
    |
    1 Quiz
  4. Lecture 4: Where Does Classical Education Come From?
    3 Topics
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    1 Quiz
  5. Lecture 5: What is Classical Education?
    2 Topics
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    1 Quiz
  6. Lecture 6: Classical Education Defined
    2 Topics
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    1 Quiz
  7. Lecture 7: Retrieving & Renewing Truth, Goodness, and Beauty
    2 Topics
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    1 Quiz
  8. Lecture 8: The Fruit of the Renewal of Classical Education
    3 Topics
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    1 Quiz
  9. Lecture 9: The History of American Education
    4 Topics
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    1 Quiz
  10. Lecture 10: An Overview of the Principles of Classical Pedagogy
    4 Topics
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    1 Quiz
  11. Lecture 11: The Seven Liberal Arts: Part 1
    4 Topics
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    1 Quiz
  12. Lecture 12: The Seven Liberal Arts: Part 2
    3 Topics
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    1 Quiz
  13. Lecture 13: Logic as a Core Discipline
    3 Topics
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    1 Quiz
Lesson Progress
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“I should as soon think of closing all my window shutters to enable me to see as of banishing the Classicks to improve Republican ideas.”
– John Adams writing to Dr. Benjamin Rush, June 19, 1789

“You ask my opinion on the extent to which classical learning should be carried in our country. … The utilities we derive from the remains of the Greek and Latin languages are, first, as models of pure taste in writing. To these we are certainly indebted for the national and caste style of modern composition which so much distinguishes the nations to whom these languages are familiar… Second. Among the values of classical learning, I estimate the luxury of reading the Greek and Roman authors in all the beauties of their originals. And why should not this innocent and elegant luxury take its prëeminent stand ahead of all those addressed merely to the senses? I think myself more indebted to my father for this than for all the other luxuries his cares and affections have placed within my reach; and more now than when younger, and more susceptible of delights from other sources. When the decay of age have enfeebled the useful energies of the mind, the classic pages fill up the vacuum of ennui, and become sweet composers to that rest of the grave into which we are all sooner or later to descend. Third. A third value is in the stores of real science deposited and transmitted us in these languages, to-wit: in history, ethics, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, natural history, &c. But to whom are these things useful? … I know it is often said there have been shining examples of men of great abilities in all the businesses of life, without any other science than what they had gathered from conversations and intercourse with the world. But who can say what these men would not have been had they started in the science on the shoulders of a Demosthenes or Cicero, of a Locke or Bacon, or Newton? To sum the whole, therefore, it may truly be said that the classical languages are a solid basis for most, and an ornament to all the sciences.”
– Thomas Jefferson writing to John Brazier, 1819