A *CM* Classical Education

Classical Education in the Classroom

Our educational program is shaped by the thoughts and practices of Charlotte Mason (CM), a 19th century Anglican educator whose method follows in the Christian classical tradition.

A Life-Giving and Beautiful Atmosphere

We should be sure "that the earliest sights he sees are sights of order, neatness, beauty; that the sounds his ear drinks in are musical and soft, tender and joyous." -Charlotte Mason

A Generous Feast of Great & Noble Ideas

Our core content introduces students to the noble minds and great ideas of the past and fosters appreciation for that which is good, true, and beautiful. "If you want your children to be intelligent, read them fairy tales." Albert Einstein

A Spirit of Curiosity & Inquiry

"We are perishing for want of Wonder, not for want of wonders." -GK Chesterton

Habits of Industry & Good Character

"The ordering of the will is not an affair of sudden resolve; it is the outcome of a slow and ordered education in which precept and example flow in from the lives and thoughts of other men."

Appreciation for those Things That Endure

Acknowledging our debt to those who have gone before, we spend a lot of time reading classic literature, gleaning ideas and wisdom from the masterful writers of the past.

The Trivium & Quadrivium

Students receive a strong intellectual foundation through study and mastery of the seven liberal arts

Classical education is a time-tested approach consistent with Divine design, that points to truth, beauty, and goodness, with the aims of molding the affections of students and of equipping them for fruitful, fulfilling, and productive lives.

1. Presentation of Living Ideas

Putting students in contact with living ideas through exposure to the great authors, artists, poets, scientists, mathematical principles and musicians is a hallmark of the classical approach to education. In each grade we make it a priority to spread before the students a broad and varied curriculum of living books and encounters with great minds and arts.

The Proper Diet of the Mind is Ideas

“Diet for the body is abundantly considered, but no one pauses to say, “I wonder does the mind need food, too, and regular meals, and what is its proper diet?” -Charlotte Mason

Agreeing with educator Charlotte Mason that ideas are “the proper diet of the mind” and understanding that ideas are learned, considered, and shared through the medium of words, we have as our educational foundation a comprehensive vision of the language arts. In the humanities, our students learn from the wisest men of the past by reading and studying their works. Students receive a thorough grounding in grammar using quality literature, and then learn to communicate through word and pen by imitating excellent sources. In short, we read a lot a lot and write a lot!

2. Examples Worthy of Imitation

Children do not operate like machines where a certain input of facts will guarantee a particular desired outcome. It is the person himself who will organize those facts and then put them to use, good or bad, according to his heart’s affections. At Lindisfarne Hall we provide our students with examples of those who have lived lives worthy of imitation in the hope that their own hearts will be directed toward worthy ideals.

 

You Are What You Love

“”What if education wasn’t first and foremost about what we know,
but about what we love?” -James K.A. Smith”

James K.A. Smith crosses swords with modern thinkers and asserts that what a person loves directs his life more than what he knows. Smith is in good company. The wisest man to ever live, King Solomon, said, “Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it.” The Greek philosophers also acknowledged the heart’s supremacy. Classical education not only nourishes the intellect but also guides and shapes the affections, helping students to orient their hearts toward the good, the true, and the beautiful.

A Classical education shapes the affections and orders the loves.

3. Narration & Composition

Narration, or the telling back of what one has read or listened to, has been proven the single best way to learn, digest, and then recall material. At Lindisfarne Hall, from the youngest student to the oldest, all get plenty of practice in the art of narration. Look at all that goes on in the mind of a student as he prepares to narrate:

“He must generalize, classify, infer, judge, visualize, discriminate, labor in one way or another, with that capable mind of his, until the substance of his book is assimilated or rejected, according as he shall determine; for the discrimination rests with him and not with his teacher.” (Mason, vol. 3)

Composition is the written “relative” of verbal narration, and the two go hand-in-hand. A classically educated person will be able to mark, learn, inwardly digest, order, and then communicate clearly to his neighbor through both the spoken and written word.

 

4. Memory & Imagination

“Memory is the cabinet of imagination, the treasury of reason, the registry of conscience, the counsel-chamber of thought” -Giambattista Basile

Lindisfarne Hall students actively exercise their minds and imaginations memorizing all the usual ‘suspects’ including U.S. presidents, states and capitals, books of the Bible, the countries of the world, and more. But it doesn’t stop there; they also commit to memory the rythyms, cadences, and words of fine speeches, imaginative poetry, and holy scripture.

5. Active Engagement with Real Objects

Our younger students engage daily with real objects both in nature and in the classroom. They soak up natural beauty during nature walks, observe birds feeding outside classroom windows, work with real simple machines and manipulatives in the classroom, create useful and beautiful handcrafts, and participate in many hands-on activities and experiments during their school days. Along classroom walls are displayed nature “finds”, beautiful artists’ prints, and maps of faraway places.
Our high-schoolers also benefit from interacting with real objects, especially in their science classes which all have a dedicated lab component.
 

6. Promotion of Virtuous Habits

Each of us has in his possession an exceedingly good servant or a very bad master, known as Habit. The heedless, listless person is a servant of habit; the useful, alert person is the master of a valuable habit. Whether for good or for ill, our lives are shaped by our habits. At Lindisfarne Hall it is our goal to help our students develop those good habits that will serve them well for their entire lives.
 

7. A Peaceful Atmosphere

Charlotte Mason famously said that “Education is an atmosphere”, and that this atmosphere should function for children as their “breath of life” drawing them towards things “honest, lovely, and of good report.”*  At Lindisfarne Hall we aspire to provide such an atmosphere, filled with beauty, peacefulness, godliness, orderliness, and happiness.

*A Philosophy of Education, p. 107)

8. The (7) Classical Liberal Arts

“The seven liberal arts are the arts of learning and they are the arts of free people. They cultivate the memory, teach how to read, write, and communicate, enable abstract reflection through math and literature, promote mental health by developing the habit of bringing the mind into harmony, and promote community well-being by developing the habits of seeking harmony in the community.” -Andrew Kern, Circe Institute

 

 

All of our studies are God-centered

“It has been the error of the schools to teach astronomy and all the other sciences and subjects of natural philosophy as accomplishments only; whereas they should be taught theologically, or with reference to the Being who is the author of them: for all the principles of science are of divine origin. Man cannot make, or invent, or contrive principles. He can only discover them; and he ought to look through the discovery to the Author.” -Thomas Paine

3.  Why both Christian & Classical?

The sad fact is that most Christian schools today are inadvertently built on Modern presuppositions. A school with “classical” in its name is intentionally distinguishing itself from these Modern Christian schools. See the table below comparing some Classical and Modern presuppositions below.

CLASSICAL

(grew out of Greek inquiry into the nature of reality)

a human has a body and an eternal soul

a human being has inherent purpose

there are universal laws of human nature

there is absolute truth

there is a spiritual word

things unseen and unmeasurable exist

humans should be encouraged toward virtue

education is formation formation of the person into a thinking, wise and virtuous citizen

the whole is more important than its parts

“Knowledge is virtue”

Education is Human Formation

MODERN

(a product of the industrial revolution)

a human being is simply an animal

the purpose of a human is derived from civic duty

nothing has an inherent nature

there is no absolute truth

only what can be measured exists

things unmeasurable do not exist

there are no absolute virtues

education is for conformity, civic usefulness, and job preparedness

the whole is reduced to its parts

“Knowledge is power”

Education is Job Training

While Charlotte Mason did not call herself classical (it had a different meaning during her lifetime) her ideas and methods follow solidly in the classical tradition. A devout Christian teacher and the head of a British teachers’ college in the 1800s, Charlotte Mason made it her life’s work to develop educational practices in light of God-given universal principles. As she said, “There are universal principles – absolute principles – that operate in the world and cannot be circumvented. We must live by them or suffer the consequences.” She worked to discover and apply these principles to educational pedagogy, and then implemented this pedagogy deeply rooted in the Christian faith in hundreds of schools, testing it over many years. And, as Christianity is the fulfillment of the truth, order, and being that the ancients were longing for, the Logos, Charlotte Mason’s works fall into the Classical tradition.

This idea of all education springing from and resting upon our relation to Almighty God is one which we have ever laboured to enforce. We take a very distinct stand upon this point. We do not merely give a religious education, because that would seem to imply the possibility of some other education, a secular education, for example. But we hold that all education is divine, that every good gift of knowledge and insight comes from above, that the Lord the Holy Spirit is the supreme educator of mankind, and that the culmination of all education (which may, at the same time, be reached by a little child) is that personal knowledge of and intimacy with God in which our being finds its fullest perfection. We hold, in fact, that great conception of education held by the medieval Church, as pictured upon the walls of the Spanish chapel in Florence. Here we have represented the descent of the Holy Ghost upon the Twelve, and directly under them, fully under the Illuminating rays, are the noble figures of the seven liberal arts, Grammar, Rhetoric, Logic, Music, Astronomy, Geometry, Arithmetic, and under these again the men who received and expressed, so far as the artist knew, the initial idea in each of these subjects; such men as Pythagoras, Zoroaster, Euclid, whom we might call pagans, but whom the earlier Church recognised as divinely taught and illuminated.

Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and all these things shall be added unto you.

The Best School Experience Ever

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Lindisfarne Hall

Physical Address:
2018 Hometown Rd
Fernandina Beach, FL 32034

Mailing Address:
1830 Lake Park Dr
Fernandina Beach, FL 32034

*main access driveway is from Citrona Dr.

For more information, email Mrs. Diana Cunningham at: LindisfarneHall.Diana@gmail.com