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Teaching Three Great Books
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Introduction
Teaching Three Great Books: Course Introduction (Preview Content)2 Topics -
LessonsInterview: Dr. Armetta on Literature and the Liberal Arts (Preview Content)2 Topics
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Lesson 1: An Overview3 Topics|1 Quiz
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Lesson 2: Huckleberry Finn—Part 1 (Preview Content)7 Topics|1 Quiz
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Lesson 3: Huckleberry Finn—Part 24 Topics|1 Quiz
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Lesson 4: Huckleberry Finn—Part 35 Topics|1 Quiz
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Lesson 5: Huckleberry Finn—Part 43 Topics|1 Quiz
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Discussion: Reading in Preparation for Teaching
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Lesson 6: Jane Eyre—Part 15 Topics|1 Quiz
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Lesson 6A: Discussion1 Topic
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Lesson 7: Jane Eyre—Part 24 Topics|1 Quiz
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Lesson 7A: Discussion
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Lesson 8: Jane Eyre—Part 33 Topics|1 Quiz
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Lesson 8A: Discussion1 Topic
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Lesson 9: Jane Eyre—Part 42 Topics|1 Quiz
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Lesson 10: Great Expectations—Part 11 Topic|1 Quiz
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Lesson 10A: Discussion
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Lesson 11: Great Expectations—Part 21 Topic
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Lesson 12: Great Expectations—Part 32 Topics
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Lesson 12A: Discussion1 Topic
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Lesson 13: Using Images to Teach Great Books2 Topics
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Lesson 13A: Discussion
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End of Course TestEnd of Course Test: Teaching Three Great Books1 Quiz
Lesson 1,
Topic 1
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Recommended Reading
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For this lecture, please read the introduction to Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884). This is available for free on Kindle.
Additional reading for the entirety of the course includes Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre (1847) and Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations (1860).
Finally, in this introductory lecture, as well as the interview in the next lesson, Dr. Armetta refers to the following sources:
- Dr. Stephen Turley’s ClassicalU course, Awakening Wonder: Truth, Goodness, and Beauty, available on ClassicalU
- Kevin Clark and Ravi Jain’s The Liberal Arts Tradition: A Philosophy of Christian Classical Education (also a ClassicalU course, The Liberal Arts Tradition)