Why Your Child Needs A Classical Education

July 31, 2008 by · Comment
Filed under: Why Your Child Needs A Classical Education 

Someone who believes that an education system that was instituted over two thousand years ago can be thrown out within a single generation has ignored the fact that time is the best testing ground when it comes to understanding human behavior.

50 years: That’s all it took for educators and lawmakers to throw away an educational system that took more than 2,000 years to age to perfection.

Classical education was first developed in ancient Greece and Rome. By the 16th century, it was used through the Western world.

This system of education gave the world some of the best leaders and thinkers between the 10th and 19th centuries. Most of America’s Founding Fathers were taught under this educational system.

Can you name another time period that experienced more progress in literature, science, philosophy, and art?

For real meaning in learning to occur, more than just fact needs to be taught. True education occurs when a learner is able to develop thinking and articulate their ideas through clear argument and persuasion.

Classical education provides the best tools for developing a child’s mind. Truly no wonder that so many classical education schools are turning up all over the country.

Order and discipline, the arts, and rigorous academic standards are all hallmarks of classic education, which are fading away in other forms of education.

The greatest task in education is to teach students how to truly learn. The influence of “progressive” teaching and performance-based learning methods make it difficult for children to acquire the mental control that they would receive in traditional methods.

Classical education encourages children to develop independent learning abilities by building a foundation of logic, language, and facts. Students clearly reap great benefits from classical education when they can express themselves clearly through logic and reason.

Classical education goes beyond the facts that need to be learned. This teaching method helps children develop the skills that essential in higher education and in daily life.

Some of these skills include independent learning, critical thinking, logical analysis, and a love for learning. In an ever-changing world, these skills will never grow out of style.

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