Items related to Notes Toward Pedagogy and Practice: Addendum to The...

Notes Toward Pedagogy and Practice: Addendum to The Liberal Arts Tradition - Softcover

 
9781600514227: Notes Toward Pedagogy and Practice: Addendum to The Liberal Arts Tradition

This specific ISBN edition is currently not available.

Synopsis

In the third edition of The Liberal Arts Tradition, the authors have taken a step further, suggesting practical ways to begin implementing the educational philosophy discussed. Included in this addendum are insightful essays, practical guides and checklists, and other resources that will aid educators in directing students in the pursuit of the true, the good, and the beautiful.

Since the publication of the first edition of <I>The Liberal Arts Tradition</I> in 2014, the book has been read and circulated by thoughtful educators around the world who are interested in what great education once was and might be again. Assigned in college classes, read by school faculties, and studied in homeschooling communities, it has been widely reviewed and recommended by many scholars, bloggers, and experts. The authors thoroughly revised the text in 2019, expanding and deepening their presentation of the core elements of the liberal arts tradition, which include piety, music, gymnastic, liberal arts, philosophy, and theology. This is a must-read for educators desiring practical ways to further the recovery of classical education.

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

About the Author

<p>Dr. Kevin Clark is the president of The Ecclesial Schools Initiative (ESI), an organization he founded in 2019 to help underserved families in Florida receive better access to Christian liberal arts education. Before founding ESI, Kevin served as academic dean of the Geneva School in Winter Park, Florida, where he also taught for fifteen years. Kevin is an Alcuin fellow with The Society for Classical Learning and a member of the teaching faculty in the Master of Arts in Classical Teaching program at The Templeton Honors College. Kevin earned a BA in philosophy from the University of Central Florida, an MA in theological studies from Reformed Theological Seminary, and a DLS from Georgetown University, where he wrote on liberal arts education and interdisciplinary practice.</p><p>Kevin is not simply a philosopher, however; he loves stories―especially reading them aloud to his children―and thinks Sarah Mackenzie’s <I>Read-Aloud Revival</I> might save the world. He understands his vocation as a Christian educator to be in service of the Church and the family as they seek to train children in the fear and admonition of the Lord. This means that for Kevin, Christian classical education is not simply a matter of academic preparation; it’s about seeing Christ’s Church flourish as a new generation of men and women bring the wisdom, beauty, and justice of New Creation to bear for God’s glory and the life of the world.</p><p>Ravi Scott Jain graduated from Davidson College with a BA and interests in physics, ancient Greek, and international political economy. He worked at various churches, received an MA from Reformed Theological Seminary, and later earned a graduate certificate in mathematics from the University of Central Florida. He began teaching calculus and physics at the Geneva School in 2003 and since that time has developed an integrated double-period class called “The Scientific Revolution.” In this class, the students read primary sources such as Galileo and Newton in order to recapitulate the narrative of discovery while preserving the mathematical and scientific rigor expected of a college-level treatment. He also teaches AP Calculus BC, in which the students strive to discover and demonstrate the “most beautiful theorem in mathematics,” and AP Physics C, in which the students encounter Faraday, Maxwell, and Einstein. Ravi has given more than 100 talks and workshops throughout the country and overseas on topics related to education, theology, mathematics, and science. He has served as a deacon in his church and is an Alcuin fellow. He has two boys, Judah and Xavier. After the duties of the week have been discharged (often by about 8:53 on Saturday night), in the few hours that remain, he enjoys spending time with his wife Kelley Anne, whom he met in Japan, as well as with the rest of his family and friends.</p>

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.

(No Available Copies)

Search Books:



Create a Want

Can't find the book you're looking for? We'll keep searching for you. If one of our booksellers adds it to AbeBooks, we'll let you know!

Create a Want