March 9th, 2008The Past Is Practical To The Present
Today I’d like to suspend my posts on Teaching the Trivium in your classical home school to share a thoughtful article written by my friend, Amy Barr, co-owner of The Lukeion Project, a website offering live, online classes on antiquity. Amy and her husband, Regan, teach Greek and Roman history, Latin, Mythology, Art, Architecture, and Greek and Latin Word Roots among other fascinating subjects. I had the privilege of taking one of their 4 week summer workshops on Troy, and it was superb. I know you’ll enjoy Amy’s perspective on history!
* * * * *
I was at a convention speaking to a harried homeschool mom about educating high schoolers in ancient history when she shrugged and confessed, “This semester we are just going to focus on world history.” I said nothing but thought, “focus on world history?!”
I’m not unsympathetic. As a home educator of three myself, I know all about the tyranny of the urgent. By the time kids get into ninth grade, history often takes a back seat behind a stack of essential-life-skill courses like botany, algebra or creative writing. The worst case scenario? History gets crunched into a survey of the whole record of human activity in a mere 16 weeks. Our ambitions to ignite a passion in our children for learning about history are reduced to a card deck of names, dates and places plus an optional craft project.
History is so much more than surveys and flash cards. We realize this best when studying the history of our nation or of our own ancestors. We can walk battle fields, witness reenactments, grind corn like the first Americans, drive Route 66 or walk the
At the Lukeion Project, we want to prove that the ancient world was in Technicolor too! We paint from a broad palette of archaeology, literature, and art. Greek and Latin add great depth. As icing, we flesh out the world of the Bible, walk with Paul or tour ancient
Thomas Jefferson prided himself on being able to write Latin with one hand, Greek with the other. Designers of our nation’s capital copied the Parthenon of Athens for the
We can not presume to be educated if we do not go beyond surveys. We must present
* * * * *
Coming up next: Teaching the Trivium, step 2, “Thinking Critically.”
Tags: classical home school, critical thinking, Greek history, Roman history, trivium

























March 11th, 2008 at 12:34 pm
I just found your blog and read through one day. Very interesting. I’d like to read more, but the font is so light that I really struggled. Is there any way you can make it a bit darker? I tried on our other computer and it’s light there too.
March 11th, 2008 at 1:21 pm
Missy,
Thanks for the feedback. I’ll see what I can do!
March 12th, 2008 at 6:25 pm
How inspiring! Thanks so much for sharing this with us - I certainly never thought ancient history could “come alive” so vibrantly, and I’m definitely going to work harder to bring it to life for my children.
Thanks! Christie
March 12th, 2008 at 8:08 pm
Christie,
I’ve been reading an ancient classic written by the “first” historian, Herodotus, named “Histories.” It reads like a modern novel! Dry, boring history books just don’t have the depth of narrative whether written like Herodotus or spoken like the Lukeion classes.