The Rebirth of Liberal Education will be Classical

What does a liberal education look like? If history is anything of a guide, Latin, memorization of poetry, and studying nature are likely to be its hallmarks. Ritalin, breathing exercises, and bureaucracy: not so much.

In certain circles, some of the practices dismissed, definitely disproven by social scientists and 20th-century educational progressives, are being brought back, despite claims of ‘elitism’ and ‘stifling creativity.’ Turning their backs on the new ways, the new advocates of the old ways—phonics and memorization, no more “whole language approach” and “meaningful learning”—often coalesce under the heading “classical.” They are a diverse lot; there are roughly as many ideas about what constitutes classical education as there are classical schools and educators. 

As with most revivals of the past, classical educators’ relationship is one of inspiration rather than strict fidelity or historical accuracy. Classical schools or curricula are “inspired” by Trivium and Quadrivium or classical ideals, but rarely seek to recreate these ideals perfectly. Instead, “classical” ideas about education are usually received through modern guides: Charlotte Mason, G.K. Chesterton, Ivan Illich, Maria Montessori, and so on. Some of these luminaries are shared with progressive educators, some are not educators per se.

If luminaries are shared, key differences are found in several broad tendencies in the classical school approach. One is to treat the past with reverence and warmth, like a grandparent. 

The classical understanding of teacher and student has a similar tenor: rejecting the teacher as a “guide on the side, not the sage on the stage,” in classical schools, instructors are expected to be sages. They are expected to have a demonstrable love, as well as an established excellence, in the subjects they teach. Thus, few have education credentials, but most have impressive backgrounds in the humanities, as classicists, medievalists, Latinists, and so on. In the not-too-distant past, PhD programs would have courted such students, but today, classical school start-ups are their primary pursuers. If schools like Harvard heed the current administration’s call for intellectual diversity, perhaps these traditional humanists will once again find homes on college faculties.

[RELATED: Classical vs Unclassical Curricula]

While methods are diverse, classical schools are generally united by a number of pedagogical features. One is the use of memorization—vocabulary, later poetry, speeches, and texts, and oral recitation is a common form of assessment. The works memorized are chosen on the merits of their content and technical proficiency: Is the poem well-constructed and contains good thematic content? Educators hope that the works will provide the foundations on which students can build strong character and fulfilling lives.

If America is to experience an educational renaissance in the 21st century, “classical” education is likely to be part of the story. Older methods like phonics are once again proving their ability to deliver the goods: a decade after Mississippi’s 2013 phonics-based reading education bill, Mississippi’s 4th graders, adjusted for student demographics, have the best reading scores in the country.

Right now, classical schoolers are too busy building charter school networks and reviving religious education to participate in public conversations about education. However, growing illiteracy and lower math scores are driving the public and elected leaders to seek deeper, increasingly radical sources for reform.

The classical approach of returning to the sources of our culture and civilization might just be sufficiently radical. Radical still means, after all, “to the roots.” Classical school students, the first to receive Latin instruction in decades, would know that.

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Author

  • Louis Galarowicz joined NAS in 2024, previously working in political consulting and classical education. He received his B.A. in philosophy and history from the University of Pennsylvania, and is currently completing a masters in theology at the Pontifical Institute of John Paul II in Washington, D.C.

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4 thoughts on “The Rebirth of Liberal Education will be Classical

  1. This “classical liberal education” will be “studying nature.” Will this stop at the four elements? Or will there be time for Galileo and Lavoisier, what with all the memorization of Latin? I suppose the phonics will be helpful. I recommend a try at the breathing exercises. An introduction to Indian thought?

    I hope the premeds will have all this OK’d in advance.

    1. “Older methods like phonics are once again proving their ability to deliver the goods: a decade after Mississippi’s 2013 phonics-based reading education bill, Mississippi’s 4th graders, adjusted for student demographics, have the best reading scores in the country.”

      You realize, of course, that Mississippi was always dead last in everything and either lowest in teacher pay or close to that. It matters how one adjusts for demographics, but if one can arguably do so in an accepted matter and have Mississippi come out first for 4th Grade reading scores, that is BIG. Also big because the 4th Graders become high school seniors in 8 years, and college graduates in 12.

    2. Beyond your sarcasm, you actually raise an important point: What is the value of the liberal arts degree — and you advocate the point which has been made before, that medical (and law) school ought to be undergraduate degrees, much as nursing and engineering already are.

      Reality is that a liberal arts education really won’t be of much benefit to students planning to enter medical school — regardless of if it includes Greek science or not.

      As to Indian thought. that’s what Indian universities are for.

      Western culture consists of five things: 1: Ancient Greece, 2: Roman Empire, 3: Renaissance, 4: Enlightenment, and 5: America.

  2. “Ritalin, breathing exercises, and bureaucracy: not so much.”

    Ummm, Ritalin (or Adderall) and Insulin should be there for those with a medical need for them, and those who do not will not be helped by them.

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