
“By WISDOM a house is built,
and through UNDERSTANDING it is established;
through KNOWLEDGE its rooms are filled
with rare and beautiful treasures.”
Proverbs 24:3-4
In classical education, we lay down a foundation of knowledge through facts and principles, the “WHATS,” with the hopes of stirring up curiosity and a sense of wonder. This leads a child to grow in their will to work and enables the teacher to move to instructing the student deeper- comparing, contrasting, sorting and reconciling ideas in the quest of understanding, the “WHYS,” Once the walls, roof and doors of understanding are established over the previously laid foundation of knowledge, then, finally, the house can begin to be adorned with wisdom, the precious jewels. (Classical Christian Education, p. 27)
Classical education is like a very large museum with many beautiful, wonder-filled rooms that could be studied over a lifetime. It is a long tradition of education that has emphasized the seeking after of truth, goodness, and beauty and the study of the liberal arts and the great books. This approach to education also includes the study of Latin. The classical approach teaches students how to learn and how to think. It is this approach to teaching students based on their developmental stage that makes this approach so very effective. It is precisely this kind of education that has produced countless great leaders, inventors, scientists, writers, philosophers, theologians, physicians, lawyers, artists, and musicians over the centuries.
Dr. Christopher Perrin
In short, a classical approach...
Aspires to cultivate virtue and wisdom and the formation of the soul which is grounded in piety and guided by theology
Seeks after truth, goodness and beauty
Desires to foster a lifelong love of learning
Uses the 7 Liberal Arts (in the traditional sense, not the contempory sense), which are the trivium (liberal arts) and the quadrivium (mathematical arts)
Supports an integrated curriculum, all ideas are interconnected, and does not approach learning through standalone “subjects”
Teaches Latin. (Why Latin?) and / or other classical languages (Greek / Hebrew)
Shares in the reading of the great books as a means of interacting with the past and fostering a formation of the human soul
Teaches the student how to learn and how to think, not what to think
The ultimate end of Classical Christian education is to enable the student to better know, glorify, and enjoy God (CIRCE Institute)
Aspires to cultivate virtue and wisdom and the formation of the soul which is grounded in piety and guided by theology
Seeks after truth, goodness and beauty
Desires to foster a lifelong love of learning
Uses the 7 Liberal Arts (in the traditional sense, not the contempory sense), which are the trivium (liberal arts) and the quadrivium (mathematical arts)
Supports an integrated curriculum, all ideas are interconnected, and does not approach learning through standalone “subjects”
Teaches Latin. (Why Latin?) and / or other classical languages (Greek / Hebrew)
Shares in the reading of the great books as a means of interacting with the past and fostering a formation of the human soul
Teaches the student how to learn and how to think, not what to think
The ultimate end of Classical Christian education is to enable the student to better know, glorify, and enjoy God (CIRCE Institute)