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Curriculum Opinion

Classical Education Is Taking Off. What鈥檚 the Appeal?

The model offers a holistic approach to schooling
By Rick Hess 鈥 May 06, 2024 9 min read
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Classical education has seen remarkable growth in recent years. Since the pandemic, of new classical schools have opened. Across the nation, it鈥檚 estimated that there are around 1,000 classical schools in operation today. These schools have tapped into a population of families attracted to their 鈥渂ack to the future鈥 emphasis on the great books, traditional virtues, and the foundations of Western civilization. But it鈥檚 not always clear what this translates to in terms of pedagogy or practice. What鈥檚 driving the appeal? What鈥檚 happening in these classrooms? And where does this model fit in the educational landscape? To answer these questions, I reached out to Rob Jackson, the founder of Classical Commons, a web-based social network designed to further the advancement of classical schools. Here鈥檚 what he had to say.

鈥搁颈肠办

Rick: Rob, there鈥檚 a lot of talk about 鈥渃lassical education鈥 today. But that term strikes me as pretty vague. So, for you, what exactly is classical education?

Rob: Simply put, classical education is a recovery of liberal arts education, where language, mathematics, history, and the sciences are integrated in K鈥12 academics. Good and great works serve as the exemplary content for those subjects鈥攅.g., Herodotus on history, Faraday for chemistry, literature from Jane Austen, and so on. In addition, most classical education incorporates training in the fine arts and athletics for a well-rounded experience of schooling. Most importantly, K鈥12 classical schools place character鈥攚hich includes the development of intellectual virtues like understanding and craftsmanship alongside moral virtues like courage and self-control鈥攁t the center of students鈥 formative years. In short, classical education is a holistic approach to schooling that encompasses mind, body, and spirit.

Rick: So, practically speaking, how do curricula and instruction look different in a classical education school from what鈥檚 in other rigorous school settings?

Rob: The use of good and great works distinguish a classical education from a nonclassical one. Classrooms are filled with exemplary models of language, scientific reasoning, musical composition, philosophical speculation, and more, which serve first as standard-bearers鈥攊.e., this is what greatness looks like鈥攁nd then as models for emulation. In many ways, classical schooling is an apprenticeship to the great minds and creators of the past, where students develop their own thinking and creativity by close study of past masters. First, they study the master鈥檚 craft through careful observation and analysis. Then, they repeatedly practice producing similar arguments, demonstrating proofs, drawing objects, and so forth. Classical education resembles the atelier, or workshop, of a master artist, where students apprentice under the guidance of the master鈥攍earning and practicing the use of tools, materials, techniques, styles, and so on to produce fine art of their own.

Rick: What you鈥檙e describing strikes me as quite different from popular instructional practices such as project-based learning or SEL. Is that fair? How do classical educators generally think about these kinds of practices?

Rob: While the virtue of justice is certainly central to a classical education, teachers in this tradition recognize the integral quality of all the virtues. If you want justice done, you鈥檒l need to develop courage, self-control, and prudence, at the very least, for justice requires giving each person what they deserve, and often the ego is the source of error and injustice. The tradition teaches that much injustice is done by those who claim to be acting in the name of justice. As for project-based learning and SEL, we could get into the finer details, but suffice to say that human flourishing is the objective of classical education.

Rick: How many classical schools are there? Do they tend to be private or public?

Rob: We estimate that nearly 1,000 classical schools exist today in all 50 states. Nearly three-quarters of those schools are private, while the remaining quarter are public charter schools. Interestingly, state funding of classical charters has propelled increases in their student populations, which are often two to three times the size of their private counterparts. And that does not include the hundreds of thousands of home schoolers who are pursuing classical education. Private classical schools can be found in every state. Public classical charters are more likely to be found in states where charter laws have been receptive to the growth of classical鈥攚hich has happened largely in the past decade. Arizona, Texas, Colorado, and Florida have dozens of classical charters.

Rick: I鈥檝e the impression that there鈥檚 been growing interest in classical education, but that鈥檚 rooted more in anecdote than evidence. What do we know about that?

Rob: The number of classical schools has doubled in the past 10 years. The growth in the last decade has been aided by the arrival of a few charter-management organizations taking the classical model to scale, including Great Hearts, Founders Academies, American Leadership, Classical Academies, etc. Then, there鈥檚 the Hillsdale College Barney Charter Initiative, which has provided support鈥攊n the form of a liberal-arts curriculum, counsel, training, and best practices鈥攆or two dozen schools within its K鈥12 school network. However, the vast majority of classical schools are operating independently, in relative isolation, which means that we have an opportunity to develop some collective wisdom by connecting these schools to discover the many ways in which classical education serves diverse local communities.

Rick: You mentioned Hillsdale鈥檚 charter initiative. As readers may know, Hillsdale is a famously conservative college. Indeed, it strikes me that classical education is frequently regarded as 鈥渃onservative鈥 in today鈥檚 polarized environment. Is that accurate?

Rob: It鈥檚 disappointing to see classical characterized as political, as though studying good and great works with children was intrinsically partisan. So, no, I don鈥檛 think it is accurate. In fact, 鈥渃onservative鈥 and 鈥減rogressive鈥 are categories that were established in the past 200 years. This means that it would be anachronistic to apply those labels to the study of politics in antiquity, the medieval period, the Renaissance, and early modernity. The classical schools with which I鈥檓 most familiar read deeply and broadly into the political philosophical tradition, from Plato through Marx, while studying the history of various regimes from antiquity to modernity. In that sense, classical education is philosophical and pre-political, seeking to teach students the political options that exist based on human thought and the historical record.

Rick: Can you talk a little more about what happens in classical classrooms? What do pedagogy, assessment, and technology look like in these schools?

Rob: I鈥檝e touched on the imitative or apprenticing aspects of classical education. It might be helpful to discuss Mortimer Adler鈥檚 useful description of the 鈥淧aideia Proposal,鈥 which includes studying great works in three distinct ways: didactic instruction, or lecture; coaching in skills; and conversational seminars. You will see all three in a good classroom. The assessment of students will measure their ability to retain certain information from the didactic component, practice specific skills under the coaching of the teacher, and explore great works in the context of a vigorous conversation among peers, guided by a teacher. Technologies from the book through the web are used judiciously in a classical school, but cellphones and digital distractions are severely limited鈥攆or the sake of focusing students鈥 attention on the good and great works that they are exploring and learning to emulate.

Rick: At a gut level, I find this all pretty appealing. But is there much in the way of evidence to suggest that the classical model is effective?

Rob: Yes, there is鈥攂ut much of the evidence is anecdotal and aggregated from local classical schools, where students have attended, gone off to college, graduated, and are now making their way in the world. Alumni of classical schools are qualitatively better prepared, in academics and in character, than their nonclassical counterparts. For instance, classical graduates have exceptional standardized-test scores and very high college-acceptance rates. Moreover, classical education is concerned with the quality and character of the graduate鈥攊ncluding intellectual qualities such as wonder, inquiry, and discipline and moral qualities like compassion, generosity, and courage. If classical education accomplishes its purpose, a young person becomes knowledgeable, competent, and good. Still, the classical world needs more empirical evidence of its success: Though there has been at least of classical alumni, there need to be numerous studies of the long-term effects of classical liberal arts education. I think we are on the cusp of an educational revolution, and it deserves to be chronicled by scholars and researchers around the country.

Rick: I get the sense that classical classrooms require highly skilled teachers with deep subject knowledge and skill at leading seminars and discussions. How hard is to find these teachers? Where do they get trained and what kind of support do they receive?

Rob: Sure, it鈥檚 harder to find the right kind of teachers. They need to have both the subject-matter expertise and the pedagogical acumen to deliver the content with didactic instruction, seminars, and the coaching of skills鈥攏o easy job! What we鈥檙e finding is that the best teachers love their subject area and are always growing in their understanding, even while they continue to master the craft of teaching their subject to K鈥12 students. Training is being done within schools and networks, but we鈥檙e also seeing higher education get involved with graduate programs designed specifically for classical education. And we鈥檙e on a mission to bring those colleges and universities into contact with K鈥12 communities across the country, through a virtual platform, social network, regional programs, and a research agenda that creates a K鈥20 ecosystem around classical鈥攁 national organization of local communities united around classical liberal arts education.

Rick: Finally, we live in a time when many in education have argued that the Great Books themselves are outmoded or irrelevant. How do you respond? And, more generally, how do you explain the value of classical education in a 21st-century world of TikTok and AI?

Rob: We should point out that any criticism leveled against the Great Books can first be found in those books. Simply put, classical education is a systematic program of study highlighting the best arguments in every subject area. Thus, when it comes to exploring specific topics, a classical education introduces students to a chorus of authors who prepare students鈥 minds to engage those topics. For example, if you want to root out racism, you should read the greatest thinkers and arguments that address the perennial human error of viewing others with disdain鈥攅.g., Augustine, Bartolom茅 de las Casas, Ghandi, King, and others. Such writers remind us that society鈥檚 defense of human dignity is ongoing鈥攁nd those writers inspire the next generation to take up that just cause. A classical education equips today鈥檚 students with a treasure chest of ideas from which they can create a more humane and just society.

The opinions expressed in Rick Hess Straight Up are strictly those of the author(s) and do not reflect the opinions or endorsement of Editorial Projects in Education, or any of its publications.

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