Jesuit Education: Its History and Principles, viewed through modern educational problems, offers a rigorous look at how Jesuit schooling shaped learning across centuries.
This non-fiction work surveys the origins, evolution, and key methods of the Jesuit curriculum, balancing historical detail with analysis of contemporary questions in education.
The book argues for careful use of original sources and situates the Ratio Studiorum within broader debates about electives, classics, and moral training. It also charts the system’s influence before and after suppression, and in the nineteenth century, highlighting both its strengths and the criticisms it faced from various quarters. Written for readers with an interest in educational history, reform, and philosophy, it combines documentary evidence with thoughtful evaluation of what worked and why.
- Learn how the Ratio Studiorum organized studies, teachers, and classroom practices.
- Understand the book’s treatment of classical languages, sciences, geography, and mother-tongue education.
- See how Jesuit education intersected with broader reforms, rival systems, and religious instruction.
- Explore the arguments for and against prescribed curricula and elective studies.
Ideal for students, educators, and history readers who want a detailed, source-grounded view of a major educational tradition.