Teaching the Classics - Set (old)

Teaching the Classics - Set (old)

A Socratic Method For Literary Education

by Adam Andrews, Missy Andrews
Curriculum Bundle, 97 pages
Current Retail Price: $85.00
Not in stock

A lot of people throw around the term “classical education,” but often what they mean is study of classical subjects or classic literature rather than implementation of classical education methods. Teaching the Classics embraces both, teaching you (the teacher) how to teach your kids how to think and interact with great literature and great ideas.

The program was developed by Adam and Missy Andrews at the request of friends who wanted to know how to approach literary instruction with their kids. The result is an easy-to-use course that offers the basics of literary analysis in a way that enables you to apply them to any story, from Peter Rabbit to Moby-Dick.

The Andrews’ philosophy is that literature should be studied for two reasons: its educational value, and for its own sake. While this course is designed to help you critically analyze and engage great literature, it will also encourage you toward a fuller appreciation and enjoyment of the books you read.

How Does This Work?

A set of four DVDs and one print syllabus are all you need. The DVDs contain footage (four hours in all) of a lecture seminar led by Adam Andrews explaining the Socratic teaching method; he even applies these methods to selected stories so you have a pattern to follow until you develop your own. His lectures aren’t just dry drones, either, he is an engaging and entertaining speaker.

The syllabus outlines the basics of the curriculum clearly and concisely. There is some overlap between the video lectures and the syllabus, but not enough to make either dispensable. It is important you spend plenty of time with both, since there isn’t anything to hand your kids so they can work on their own—you really need to understand the material yourself before presenting it to your students.

Andrews identifies five essential elements found in any work of narrative fiction: plot, conflict, setting, character, and theme. Discovering what these are in a given story provides a segue to deeper investigation and understanding of it. Andrews uses kids’ stories to illustrate each of these elements initially, since in children’s literature they are easiest to identify. He then discusses them in the context of adult literature.

At the end of the syllabus there is an outline for using Teaching the Classics as a literature curriculum. There is also a list of Socratic questions for use by the teacher, a glossary of terms, and reading lists for various reading levels. This isn’t one of those gimmicky courses that require all kinds of extra materials—after the syllabus and DVDs, all you need to procure are the books themselves.

This is a course for teachers and parents. It is important that you really engage the material. Ideally, mom and dad both watch the DVD lectures and read the syllabus together, and then implement the course in tandem. This shouldn’t be an isolated school subject that you devote a specific hour to each day and then move on to other things, it should become second nature in many ways. If the whole family is engaged, you can discuss literature (or anything else, really) Socratically, at dinner, in the car, or in flight from marauding extraterrestrials.

What the Andrews really do here is teach you, and by extension your kids, how to think. While literature is the means to that end, the skills you will develop are easily transferred to any other area of study. With that in mind, Adam and Missy have developed a complimentary program, Teaching the Classics: Worldview Supplement, to take their methods beyond literature and apply them to worldview and philosophy in general.

Our Honest Opinion:

There are a lot of literature curricula out there, a lot of them requiring tons of reading and all kinds of supplemental books and superfluous written work. Teaching the Classics is easy to understand and implement, and is adaptable to basically any situation. It will require (in some cases) considerable effort at first, but after enough practice it becomes second nature. This course is highly recommended.

Also Available:

Using the TTC method, Adam & Missy have prepared a number of study guides ready-made for parents. While most of these are available for a fee on their website, you may download a free sample of the Bronze Bow guide by clicking here.

Sample of lesson from DVD:

Review by C. Hollis Crossman
C. Hollis Crossman used to be a child. Now he's a husband and father who loves church, good food, and weird stuff. He might be a mythical creature, but he's definitely not a centaur. Read more of his reviews here.
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Eli of Oregon, 3/9/2010
Because of their academic backgrounds, Adam Andrews and his wife Missy were asked to explain to some home school parents (in just four weeks!) how to teach their kids to analyze literature. A crazy idea, they thought, but the persistent neighbors kept asking until they agreed to try, and Teaching the Classics was born.

We heard of this program early in 2006, ordered a copy, and were intrigued enough by it that we took it home for more careful review. My wife and I spent a week of evenings watching the DVDs and reading through the syllabus, and we are now convinced of the usefulness of the material. It is not for students, but for parents. It teaches you how to lead discussions about literature discussing the five major elements of a story (conflict, plot, setting, characters, and theme) using the "Socratic method" (more on this in a moment). And it does this very simply, using children's tales to bring these elements out.

The syllabus offers a tidy chart for diagramming the elements, definitions of important literary terms, a helpful book list for kids of all ages, and the neatest part of all—the "Socratic List." Socrates, of course, was a Greek philosopher famous for his technique of asking questions to help his students develop their ideas. The Socratic List is a tool to help you do the same thing. Appendix A gives you twenty-one basic questions to ask your students about any story's elements. Each of these questions offers five to seventeen sub-questions, in order from simple to complex, so that you can engage all levels of students with the same yarn.

The four DVDs follow Mr. Andrews as he walks you through the syllabus. In five lessons and a practice session, he introduces the approach, shows you how to analyze literature using six short stories, and then gives you instructions in how to use it with your family or classroom.

Adam Andrews and his wife are home school parents; they understand your life is busy, and have developed this tool with that in mind. Without adding another whole curriculum to your schedule, Teaching the Classics will help you teach your children how to analyze literature in a memorable and engaging way. We are quite impressed, and plan on using this method for our own children.