Yes i got that. I stated as much.
Yeah, I went to public schools for 10 years (more than half of that in HISD) and an average private school for 2 years. You can't fool me with imaginary benefits of being around bad students, woke faculty and discipline problems. I got to see both sides and there was no comparison. The public schools, even with advanced level classes, were simply not competitive in terms of offering a good learning environment and a community of other families that were good influences.CDUB98 said:schmendeler said:
also wanted our kids to be well-rounded, and not in a bubble of only the same kind of people as us.
Tell me you don't know what you're talking about without telling me you don't know what you're talking about.
Ray Guy said:
It's called personality mirroring and its a skill that will help them be successful in life. As long as not over applied. Small town people do it too. Grow up and develop twang that didn't exist in grade school. Think bigger McFly.
swimmerbabe11 said:
the idea of sending twins to two separate schools is absolutely wild to me.
I'm guessing twin number 2 is in a sport like baseball where there can be crazy competition to get playing time at a place like Strake.swimmerbabe11 said:
the idea of sending twins to two separate schools is absolutely wild to me.
bigjag19 said:
I would imagine most "rich kid" sports are hella competitive at Strake.
Ehh, bit over the top. I don't remember swimmy ever flirting with us GB pervs. Maybe I was just oblivious.maroon barchetta said:
Will you let your 16 year-old daughter flirt with guys on college football message boards like her mom used to do?
Didn't think so.
Good call.
CDUB98 said:Ehh, bit over the top. I don't remember swimmy ever flirting with us GB pervs. Maybe I was just oblivious.maroon barchetta said:
Will you let your 16 year-old daughter flirt with guys on college football message boards like her mom used to do?
Didn't think so.
Good call.
CDUB98 said:Ehh, bit over the top. I don't remember swimmy ever flirting with us GB pervs. Maybe I was just oblivious.maroon barchetta said:
Will you let your 16 year-old daughter flirt with guys on college football message boards like her mom used to do?
Didn't think so.
Good call.
swimmerbabe11 said:
I didn't shy away from admitting that my children are hypothetical and that I am biased from my own anecdotal experiences.
My hypothetical children are smart, beautiful, and athletic btw. Strong willed AND well behaved. Adventurous, but stay out of trouble. AND they aren't picky eaters AT ALL. Screens? who needs them. They are reading classic literature. /tongue in cheek
Quote:
Classical education forms children to love learning the good, true, and beautiful, and to serve their neighbors by means of whatever vocation they may have.
This formation hands over the treasury of knowledge that is common to Western Civilization namely, the Liberal Arts and Sciences. The Liberal Arts are sevenfold: the Trivium (three ways) or Language Arts (Grammar, Logic, and Rhetoric) and the Quadrivium (four ways) or Mathematical Arts (Mathematics, Music, Geometry, and Astronomy). Other traditional subjects fit into these. The Liberal Sciences are fields of knowledge (scientia means knowledge in Latin), chiefly philosophy, law and theology. These arts and sciences along with the main contents of the humanities (history and literature) flesh out the content of the rich education Memorial delivers to each student.
cajunaggie08 said:
Can someone put it in real world terms what the heck a "Classical Education" is? I googled the definition and it doesn't seem like anything different or unique. I feel like I never heard the term until a year ago and now I see numerous parents who have their kids in those charter and private schools stating they like the school because it offers "Classical Education"
AgLiving06 said:
At a basic level, it's supposed to be more well-rounded than more modern systems.
Link to MLS: https://www.memoriallutheranschool.org/about/classical-education.cfmQuote:
Classical education forms children to love learning the good, true, and beautiful, and to serve their neighbors by means of whatever vocation they may have.
This formation hands over the treasury of knowledge that is common to Western Civilization namely, the Liberal Arts and Sciences. The Liberal Arts are sevenfold: the Trivium (three ways) or Language Arts (Grammar, Logic, and Rhetoric) and the Quadrivium (four ways) or Mathematical Arts (Mathematics, Music, Geometry, and Astronomy). Other traditional subjects fit into these. The Liberal Sciences are fields of knowledge (scientia means knowledge in Latin), chiefly philosophy, law and theology. These arts and sciences along with the main contents of the humanities (history and literature) flesh out the content of the rich education Memorial delivers to each student.
What this means is more of a focus on the classics books over modern readings. It means less tech in the classroom. It means introductions to Logic, Rhetoric, Philosophy, etc.
Essentially they want students to graduate with a general education that touches on all the categories of a true "Liberal Arts" education vs one focused on STEM, Common Core, etc.
In a large sense, it's really a return to how we were educated before it was all screwed up.
Edit to add this link as well, which does a decent job: https://www.ccle.org/classical-lutheran-education-101/