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The Classical Conversations Blog - Post Page 96

Discover Posts on Homeschooling and Classical, Christian Education

Apr 12, 2013

Developing “Math Sense”

My daughter’s first word was “book.” I am sure she babbled “MaMaMa” and “Dada” early on, but her first intelligible word was definitely “book”! Perhaps this is not surprising, given that my husband and I read to her nightly, even while she was in the womb. My parents used...

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Apr 11, 2013

The Missing Pieces of Public Education

This article is modified from sections from the newly-released bookĀ MicroSecession: Simple Ways to Liberate Yourself, Your Family, and Your Community from Government Idiocy. When people think of the word ā€œeducation,ā€ usually the first thing that pops into their minds is their local elementary schools. When we think of a...

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Apr 01, 2013

What If the Art Teacher Taught Math?

My thirteen-year-old daughter is in Challenge B this year, and she is preparing for Mock Trial, so we took a field trip, along with several moms and teenagers, to visit a courthouse and watch a real trial. As we waited for the trial to begin, the sheriff talked with...

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Mar 29, 2013

Skills versus Subjects

Classical education is a ā€œcurious thing,ā€ viewed from the perspective of a traditional educator. Traditional education emphasizes acquiring knowledge of a host of subjects through the passing of a multitude of classes en route to receiving a diploma. Classical education emphasizes the skills of learning and the acquisition of...

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Mar 26, 2013

How to Tame the Testing Tempest

In Romans 12:2, Paul writes: ā€œDo not conformĀ to the pattern of this world,Ā but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.Ā Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasingĀ and perfect willā€ (NIV). Having taught in the public school system for almost ten years,...

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Mar 25, 2013

Protocol, Served Just As You Like It

I marked my twelfth protocol, with a small group of students and a fellow mom, by experiencing Gioachino Rossini’s opera,Ā The Barber of Seville. We, a happy bunch dressed in regalia, ventured out on a weekday to enjoy fine dining and to feast our senses on delectable artistry. However, many...

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