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Thou shalt learn the classics
It's back to basics at some of
Virginia's private Christian schools
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by Heather
B. Hayes
for Virginia Business
February 2007
Bob and Denise Maddox have solid educational backgrounds
when it comes to helping their children with homework.
Both hold engineering degrees and work in high-tech
jobs, and Denise is bilingual.
Yet ever since the couple enrolled Evan, 11, and Melanie,
9, in Veritas Classical Christian School in Richmond,
Denise has worried that the day will come when her
children will ask a school-related question that she
can't answer.
That's because Veritas, like other Classical Christian
schools, adheres to the Trivium, the ancient foundation
of Western education, characterized by three primary
subjects: grammar, logic and rhetoric. On a practical
level, the methodology requires intensive study of
Latin and Greek, emphasizes the reading of great literature
and primary source material, and encourages the development
of critical thinking skills through lessons in theology,
philosophy, literature, history, formal logic and the
sciences.
"I'm one of those parents who doesn't want my
kid to know more than I do," says Denise. "With
the curriculum they're studying, though, that's very
much a danger."
As a defensive measure, Denise
is engaging in study on her own. She read "The Scarlet Letter" over
the summer and joined a Veritas parents' book club
where selections include "Paradise Lost" by
John Milton, "Fear and Trembling" by Soren
Kierkegaard and "Notes from Underground" by
Fyodor Dostoevsky.
Not that Maddox is complaining.
She is one of a growing number of parents sold on
Classical Christian education, a school model that
was jump-started in the early 1990s when Douglas
Wilson wrote the book "Rediscovering
the Lost Tools of Learning."
There are now 186 Classical Christian schools across
the country, including 10 in Virginia, according to
the Association of Classical and Christian Schools,
an accrediting organization in Moscow, Idaho. Patch
Blakey, the association's executive director, says
that, on average, membership continues to grow nationally
by 10 schools a year.
"I would say that what we're offering is definitely
in high demand," says John Heaton, headmaster
at New Covenant Schools in Lynchburg. New Covenant
started in 1991 with just a few students and borrowed
space. Now, it has more than 300 students and is preparing
to build additional classrooms on its 50-acre campus
so it can accommodate up to 425 students. Faith Christian
School in Roanoke, established in 1997 with 47 middle
and high school students, added a grammar school in
fall 2004 and expects to move to its own campus this
fall. Veritas, currently a K-8 school, plans a high
school soon.
CLASSICAL
CHRISTIAN
SCHOOLS IN VIRGINIA |
AD
FONTES ACADEMY
P.O. Box 916, Centreville, VA 20122
(703) 815-6022
FAX: (703) 738-2320
Contact: Carol Brown
APPOMATTOX
CHRISTIAN ACADEMY
P.O. Box 517, Appomattox, VA 24522
(434) 352-7373
Contact: Marcie Jones
CALVARY
CLASSICAL SCHOOL
403 Whealton Road
Hampton, VA 23666
(757) 262-0062
FAX: (757) 825-5843
Contact: Lori Rogers, principal
DOMINION
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
P.O. Box 3068, Oakton, VA 22124
10922 Vale Road, Oakton, VA 22124
(703) 758-1055
FAX: (703) 758-1074
Contact: Janis R. Pierce
FAITH
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
4873 Brambleton Ave. Suite A
Roanoke, VA 24018
(540) 769-5200 FAX: (540) 769-6030
Contact: Samuel P. Cox,
head of school
NEW
COVENANT SCHOOLS
122 Fleetwood Drive
Lynchburg, VA 24501
(434) 847-8313
FAX: (434) 455-0214
Contact: John Heaton
OAK HILL CHRISTIAN
SCHOOL
11480 Sunset Hills Road
Reston, VA 20190
(703) 796-6887
FAX: (703) 796-0582
Contact: Robert Thoburn
PACTUM
CHRISTIAN ACADEMY
P.O. Box 3023, Lynchburg, VA 24503
(434) 847-4481
Contact: Virgil Hurt
PROVIDENCE CLASSICAL SCHOOL
116 Palace Lane
Williamsburg, VA 23185
(757) 565-2900
FAX: (757) 565-3720
SUMMIT
CHRISTIAN ACADEMY
Upper School: 4209 Big Bethel Road
Yorktown, VA 23693
(757) 867-7005 FAX: (757) 867-8590
Lower School: 69 Saunders Road
Newport News, VA 23601
(757) 599-9424
FAX: (757) 599-1898
Contact: Marilyn Lane, headmaster
VERITAS
CLASSICAL CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
6627-B Jahnke Road
Richmond, VA 23225
(804) 272-9517
FAX: (804) 272-9518
Contact: Dean K. Luckenbaugh
Craig Bouvier, headmaster
Debbie Jones, grammar school principal |
The appeal of this education is two-fold, say school
officials. Academic rigor is one factor driving demand,
but many parents are just as attracted by the fact
that the educational model presents every subject in
the context of a Christian worldview. Although schools
accept students of most religious affiliations, they
do require parents to sign a statement of Christian
faith during the admissions process.
The spiritual aspects of a
Classical Christian school, explains Dean Luckenbaugh,
founder and president of Veritas, involve more than
a Bible class and weekly attendance at chapel. "Our faith is not departmental;
it's pervasive," he says.
Classical Christian education has its critics. They're
found mainly among educators who contend that the academics
are too extreme for children, says Samuel P. Cox, headmaster
at Faith Christian School. Demanding coursework is
not unique to Classical Christian schools, he says;
after all, a tough curriculum has long been the hallmark
of private schools.
What is unique about the approach
is adherence to the Trivium, a method designed to "cut with the
grain" of how children learn, explains Carol Brown,
headmaster of Ad Fontes Academy in Centreville, a K-12
school with 134 students. "It's the way children
were taught for centuries in Western societies," she
says. Students at the grammar level, for example, are
especially adept at memorization, so teachers utilize
rote methods like rhythmic verse, singing and drama
to help them absorb a tremendous amount of information,
including basic Latin, math facts and ancient history.
"Children learn what you present to them," says
Brown. "If children can memorize the crazy character
names in their video games, they can certainly learn
about Odysseus and Telemachus."
By middle school, when children
develop the capacity for abstract thought and the
ability to draw conclusions from facts, Classical
Christian schools begin teaching formal logic. Students
learn how to develop sound reasoning skills, construct
valid arguments and detect and counter logical fallacies. "The
goal of our school is not to produce 'regurgitators'
who can spit out a lot of content, but independent
learners and thinkers," explains
Craig Bouvier, interim headmaster at Veritas.
By high school, students are starting to formulate
their own views, so the coursework shifts. Students
are taught how to present their views and how to defend
those views, orally and in writing, with persuasion
and eloquence. Seniors at many schools are even expected
to write - and defend - a thesis on a debatable topic.
"When students transfer in here at the higher
grades, they are amazed that we are actually interested
in hearing what they think about a certain topic," says
Brown.
Another hallmark of the Classical
Christian school is its use of primary sources instead
of textbooks. These sources include the Bible and
works by Homer, Aristotle, Shakespeare and Saint
Augustine. "In
our history classes, students don't read about the
Magna Carta, they read the actual Magna Carta," says
Heaton.
Cox is quick to point out that not all Classical Christian
schools are alike. Some are church-affiliated, such
as Appomattox Christian Academy, which is tied to the
local Anglican Church. Others are non-denominational.
And while they all adhere to the Trivium, each has
its own take on how - and when - to teach certain subjects.
One challenge for larger Classical Christian schools
is attrition at the higher grades, despite the fact
that tuition at these schools is often less than half
the cost of competing private schools. Upper school
students at New Covenant, for example, pay $5,595 a
year, compared with $15,590 at nearby Virginia Episcopal
School. Ad Fontes charges $7,700 per student in grades
nine through 12, compared with $22,935 for high school
students at the Flint Hill School in nearby Oakton.
Officials attribute the relatively
small class sizes in the upper grades to "growing pains" and
the desire of some students for a more traditional
high school educational or social environment. Classical
Christian schools generally don't field competitive
football teams or host senior proms. In fact, students
are more likely to spend after-school hours involved
in Latin competition or community service activities.
And academic electives beyond classical subjects are
often limited. While Summit Christian Academy in Yorktown
and Faith Christian School offer Spanish at the high-school
level, other schools can't spare the academic time
or resources to provide study in foreign languages
beyond Latin and Greek. Advanced Placement courses
are available at some schools but usually only in basic
subjects such as U.S. history, English and calculus.
Still, students who attend their high school years
at Classical Christian schools perform well on college
preparation exams. The 51 students who graduated from
New Covenant since 2001, for example, scored an average
of 1270 on their SAT exams (300 above the national
average) and seven were chosen as National Merit Scholarship
finalists.
Graduates of Faith Christian School have averaged
above 1300 on their SAT scores and all of them have
been accepted into their first choice of colleges,
including New York University, the University of North
Carolina and the University of Edinburgh in Scotland.
Graduates of Ad Fontes Academy, meanwhile, have gone
on to the Air Force Academy, Boston University and
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
Peter Joslyn, a 2002 graduate of New Covenant who
transferred from a local parochial school in the ninth
grade, says that classical education gave him the skills
he needed to succeed at college. In fact, when he began
studying ancient Greek at Wabash College in Indiana,
he was struck by how advanced his composition and expression
skills were. He ended up tutoring many of his classmates
in writing - officially and non-officially - for four
years.
As a result of his collegiate
experience, 22-year-old Joslyn has come full circle.
This fall he became the newest faculty member at
New Covenant, teaching high school-level Greek, Latin,
English and philosophy courses. "I
decided that I wanted to provide that benefit to others."
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