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Thank goodness I was never sent to school, it would have rubbed
off some of the originality" - Beatrix Potter
"I
am struck by the fact that the more slowly trees grow at first,
the sounder they are at the core, and I think the same is
true of human beings." -- from the Journal of Henry David
Thoreau
TO
OUR READERS
by Stephen F. Bertucci, Editor
ISSUES
#3 & #4. The 3rd issue of Classical Homeschooling Magazine
online explores the limits of formal education. Modern formal
education is usually divided into three levels: the primary/grammar/elementary
level; the secondary/high school level; and the tertiary/college
level (usually culminating at a university).
The “middle
school” (generally 6th through 8th grades) and “junior
high” (7th-9th grades) are of relatively recent vintage.
Such intermediate schools mark a further step away from a
proper appreciation of the distinction between elementary
and secondary education, between the liberal arts and liberal
education. The notion that the grammar, dialectical and rhetorical
“stages” from the oft-quoted article by Dorothy
Sayers (see issue #2 of CHM) is the rationale for creation
of such schools is simply inaccurate. Instead, the dialectic
and rhetoric have been almost entirely expunged from school
curricula.
The elementary
level, traditionally, was entirely preparatory and preintellectual,
predispositive toward liberal education. Secondary education
was partly completing the acquisition of the liberal arts,
and partly preparatory - the acquisition of discipline in
using the liberal arts, to train minds in all the skills of
reading, writing, speaking, listening and, perforce, the skills
of thinking and working with important ideas, presented so
richly in the great classics, either for later use at college
level specialization (mastery of specific subject areas),
or for preparation for their own self-directed education.
In the modern scheme, the whole of education from kindergarten
through 12th grade is little more than merely a tediously
graduated progression of learning the grammars of the elementary
liberal arts – reading, writing, math. Stretched out
over 13 years, learning the elementary liberal arts eventually
becomes boring and a terrible waste of time and talent. For
example, imagine spending an entire semester (at any age)
learning to name just 8 colors, the alphabet and shapes (circles,
squares, etc.). That is precisely what some public schools
set as their goal for an entire semester of either kindergarten
or 1st grade.
If students
are not challenged they quickly grow bored with such “education.”
Their natural love of learning new things dries up and, too
often, dies. That is also one of the reasons schools simply
do not work well – no pace can both challenge the brighter
students and not overwhelm the rest. Or, put the other way,
no teaching pace can both accommodate and suit the average
or slower students, and challenge the brighter students in
the class - and all classes will be composed of such a mixture
of abilities, no matter how “culled” or organized.
Our first
two issues explored matters pertaining principally to the
ideal elementary program (mainly in issue #2) and the ideal
secondary program (mainly in issue #1), culminating in the
Great Books program for high school. We looked at not only
educating the mind, but – in the 2nd issue – also
developing the sensory, emotional and intuitive facets of
the human personality, so necessary for further development.
Part of any education worthy of the name results in (or at
least aims at) encouraging a balanced personality, not a “bookworm,”
nor a one-dimensional computer “nerd, ” neither
a foppish aesthete nor a brutish athlete. Rather, the goal
is a well-balanced, young person, at home with books and the
intellectual life as well as with nature, music, art and sports,
comfortable with his or her emotions and intuitions, and firmly
rooted in the senses while aspiring to the stars and the transcendent.
We believe
that homeschooling is ideally suited to the elementary and
secondary levels of education. Parental qualifications are
minimal: the ability to read, write and calculate –
with these you can lead, and, if need be, learn along with,
your children. By the secondary level we believe the Great
Books program – reading the greatest works produced
by the great sages of mankind – is the proper material
upon which to apply and practice the learning arts (aka liberal/freeing
arts), while becoming acquainted with the thought, ideas,
methods, manners and stories (his-story) of the great sages
of mankind. In this we follow the practice of the past, prior
to the 20th century, and the opinion of one whom we regard
as the greatest educational philosopher of the last century,
perhaps of all time – the late Dr. Mortimer J. Adler
- who called the study of the Great Books the “backbone”
of a liberal education.
The Great
Books program for secondary education does not make high schoolers
into experts, hopefully it guides them to be “amateurs,”
lovers (as the word amateur translates) of the great, transcendent
ideas of beauty, truth and goodness. Great Books students
quickly meet Socrates and his sincere, humble, search for
virtue and truth, and are captivated by his winsome personality
and charming methods of teaching and learning as recorded
by his student, Plato. Plato, in turn, taught Aristotle (who
taught Alexander the Great), and so the students are gently
led to follow his search for more and deeper truths, and so
on through author after author, chronologically down the ages.
In this program students become acquainted with the great
authors and follow their discoveries in the same order of
human inquiry. Later, in college/tertiary education, or on
their own, students may then become intimate friends - experts
- in the thought of one or two of the great authors, in their
field of interest and specialization. Having met those sages
before, and become acquainted with them in a Great Books program,
the student got an early leg up in determining the ideas and
fields of activity they love. They may then view their fields
from a heightened perspective, standing on the shoulders of
their great predecessors, rather than from a position of complete
unfamiliarity and ignorance, or worse – choosing a field
by default, with little interest or enthusiasm.
Of course,
what has happened since WWII, when the well-deserved GI Education
Bill flooded the colleges with war veterans, is that what
formerly was learned by or in high school before college had
to be taught in college (such as remedial English, algebra,
beginning English literature, etc.). Colleges inevitably had
to lower their standards to accommodate returning, mature
veterans applying for a college education. In turn, the elementary
and high schools in a few years began accepting floods of
students (not a bad problem in itself) from the post-war baby-boom.
They too gradually lowered their standards as there were not
enough well-educated teachers to handle the tide, nor well-prepared
students advancing into the higher grades. The whole overwhelmed
system began a gradual decline. This decline was exacerbated
by several “progressive” educational theories,
easily foisted on inexperienced, new teachers.
This
largely accounts for the current phenomenon of high school
students increasingly unable even to read, and college students
little more than functionally literate. The whole system is
degraded and rather than reforming itself back to its roots,
it has gradually transformed – under pressure for measurable,
rapid economic results – into vocational centers, training
students for business degrees, “hotel management, ”“tennis,”
and the like, before they are well-balanced, before they have
seen the whole panoply of reality, at least in some measure
and through someone’s lens other than their own uneducated
ones. They are then informed when they are handed their diplomas
that they are “educated, ” ready for leadership
and dealing with the myriad areas of life and learning about
which they have been taught little to nothing. This is a great
disservice to these students (not to mention to their parents
paying the bills for it), and a deception unworthy of any
educational institution. Serious Great Books programs and
their antecedent, preparatory, elementary programs can reverse
this decline - for your children.
Getting
to know the Great Books, and their authors and ideas, is best
done by reading them (rather than fifth-rate textbooks about
them), supplemented by lively discussions with others who
are reading the same books at the same time. They may also
be read and pondered entirely independently, and sometimes
this may be necessary, so we have prepared Great Books Study
Guides for this purpose as well as to enhance the reading
experience of other readers – but anyone who has participated
in a live-discussion group (online or in person) cannot but
profit from the interchange, the refining of ideas and logic,
the mutual inquiry and communal excitement that often happens
in a flash of genuine enlightenment in such groups. Dr. Adler
strongly recommended participation in great books discussion
groups and we agree and follow him in that, though they are
optional. These are usually conducted weekly (to accompany
the weekly book selection) for two hours. Anything less is
too short to delve very deeply; anything more wearies the
mind and a lively discussion must begin eventually to lag.
For grades 3rd-8th they range from ½ to 1 hour every
other week.
Issues
#3 and #4 of Classical Homeschooling prescind from the prior
issues, from considering the primary and secondary levels
of education, and begin to discuss what tertiary education
ought to look like. Some of the finest educators and educational
philosophers of our day have contributed to these issues,
as have founders of colleges – a daunting, heroic labor.
Issue #3 addresses topics generic to any college or university
and can be considered to supplement, follow and complete Great
Books programs.
Issue
#4 consists of contributions derived from a conference on
the “Ideal of a University” hosted by the Angelicum
Academy in Seattle in 2002, and hence contains some material
specific to a Catholic institution of higher learning. Both
issues contain gems of insight wrought from decades of experience
and reflection at the secondary, college and university levels
of formal education.
Finally,
Dr. Elisabeth Carmack has collected a number of articles on
health and parenting issues directly related to education,
at all levels, which appear in issue #4.
We hope
you enjoy and profit from issues #3 and #4 of Classical Homeschooling
magazine. Unless our plans change, these will be the final
installments and completion to this four-issue online project
in order to enable us to devote more time to implementing
the entire program described.
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