Definition of
a Classical Education
Based on the centuries old model of education
called the Trivium, Caldwell's goal is to teach students the proper
use of the tools of learning. The Trivium divides the school career
into three stages according to the way children naturally develop.
The three stages are grammar, dialectic, and rhetoric.
Grammar
period (Grades K-5)
Students begin by learning the fundamental
facts
and rules of each subject. Teaching methods such
as singing, drilling, chanting, and recitation are emphasized.
Latin instruction begins in the third grade. |
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Dialectic
stage (Grades 6-8)
Students are taught how to analyze, reason,
question,
evaluate, and critique. Logic, the art of arguing correctly,
is taught as a core subject. |
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Rhetoric
stage (Grades 9-12)
In the study of rhetoric, students learn how to express what
they know and what they are learning. Debate, apologetics, speech,
essay writing, and drama are emphasized during this stage. The
rhetoric stage is built on a foundation of accumulated knowledge
and is the capstone of the Trivium. |
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