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Paperback Wisdom and Eloquence: A Christian Paradigm for Classical Learning Book

ISBN: 1581345526

ISBN13: 9781581345520

Wisdom and Eloquence: A Christian Paradigm for Classical Learning

To succeedin the world today, students need an education that equips them torecognize current trends, to be creative and flexible to respond tochanging circumstances, to demonstrate sound judgment to work forsociety's good, and to gain the ability to communicatepersuasively.

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Format: Paperback

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Customer Reviews

3 ratings

The title is very telling

If you are not familiar with Classical education, don't start with this book. This book is great, but it is not for the beginner. "Wisdom and Eloquence" is written on a doctoral level (mostly for the educator). There is no reading fast and glossing over minor details, the details are never minor. When you pick up this book, be ready to study. With that said, this book is beautiful, eloquent and convincing. In addition to the well laid out argument for Classical education, I was surprised to find my faith strengthened by the reasoning and scripture use of the authors. If you are a christian educator or a homeschooling parent with an understanding of Classical Education, read this book! You will never be the same!

If you are considering the benefit of a classical education for your children, you might want to con

Many parents, lamenting the apparent demise of the public school system, have resorted to home schooling in an effort to revive what they perceive to be a quality education, the classical education. In light of spiraling dropout rates and the plummeting quality of education, it should be no great surprise that there has been a huge resurgence in interest of the classical Christian education, both with the parent and educator alike. In 1947 Dorothy Sayers addressed a summer class held at Oxford in which she delivered a classic essay entitled "The Lost Tools of Education," outlining the possibility of reviving the lost art of the classical education. Robert Littlejohn and Charles T. Evans expound upon, while begging to differ some with Sayers, the basic premise of the classical education in their book (marvelously eloquent in its own right), Wisdom and Eloquence: A Christian Paradigm for Classical Learning. The authors use the "trivium" as the stepping stone into their discourse on the merits of the classical education. The literal meaning of trivium is the threefold way or road," the three stages, in order, are grammar, dialectic, and rhetoric. Coming from a Christian worldview, Littlejohn and Evans continue on to delineate what they feel the classical education entails in the realm of liberal arts and sciences, mathematics and music, right on down to keyboard instruction. They continue on to explain how educators and parents can implement the educational strategies which once upon a time produced some of the great intellects of the world. I found myself almost immediately discomforted with the overabundance of polysyllabic words in the text. It appeared to be written in an academic language meant to impress rather than instruct. The authors adopted a more colloquial format as they went along and I felt more at ease with the message the authors meant to impart. This book obviously contains more theory of education than practical suggestion and I would not recommend it to those looking for specific curriculum resources, however I would encourage parents, Christian educators and heads of schools to purchase a copy as they may wish to incorporate some of the theory into an already existing curriculum. Who knows, perhaps the wisdom imparted in this book may lead to the education of another William Jennings Bryan!

Strong history and explanation of the Liberal Arts

Our authors have been involved in education for many years both public and private; Christian and "secular." They are associated with the Society of Classical Learning and speak with profound insight and experience. The strength of the book is the historical discussion of the Liberal Arts and their interaction with Miss Sayers' 1947 essay, "The Lost Tools fo Learning." In addition, they demonstrate the use of the Trivium among Christians of various ages over the past 2500 years of Western history. I don't agree with everything our authors say, but overall it is one of the best discussions in the neo-classical school movement.
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