Three chapters from Chesterton’s What’s Wrong With the World
Read MoreEducation must teach the ‘four sanities’.
Read MoreDr. Peter Kreeft nails it with his responses to typical misconceptions about classical education!
Read MoreOur Academy is not just a school, but a learning community. Everyone is welcome to the fun of these discussions!
Read MoreOn September 19 James Matthew Wilson will speak in the Faustina Building auditorium! Here’s a quick article to get your thoughts and questions percolating for that discussion!
Read MoreOur school emerged from a context - friends with lively minds who love learning and hope a learning community will continue to enrich the context of education that surrounds our students. Please come!
Read MoreTrue Grit is a favorite reread of mine, and it’s one of only a few books that, upon finishing it, I want to turn right back to the first page and read it all over again.
Read More“Stevens talks about his vocation in multiple instances, but his understanding of his job pales in comparison to my understanding of my Vocation to marriage and family life.”
Read MoreCharlotte’s Web really is not a modern story at all, and it has much more in common with the ancient myths, scriptures, and fairy tales. In short, the story is really not about lovable farmyard talking animals. Instead, it is about the ancient pattern of how the feminine saves ‘from above’.
Read MoreSee you at the school tonight for a discussion of JPII’s thoughts on the human person, conveyed by the saint’s long-time friend Stanislaw Grygiel. It is not necessary to have, or to read the book!
6-8 p.m.
Read More“…the two married persons—are themselves the sacrament, the outward sign of inward grace, a manifestation of Christ’s love for His bride, the Church. Do Jonathan and Mina live up to this in Dracula? Is this what Bram Stoker was going for? I’m not sure, but it does seem to me that the turning point in the story is Jonathan and Mina’s marriage.”
Read MoreOwen Barfield is the lesser known of the Inklings - a group of friends that included C.S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien. Join us tonight for a discussion of his book Saving the Appearances - Barfield’s own favorite of all his books.
Read MoreA catechetical look at a famous work of art.
Read MoreCome to the school tonight for a rich discussion of the encyclical Caritas in Veritate. You needn’t read ahead! A digest will be given so we can enjoy sharing our thoughts about this provocative work from Pope Benedict XVI.
6-8 p.m.
Read MoreThe Founders of our Academy dreamed of the school as the hub of a learning community. The author of this reflection on her reading is a member of that wider community, as are all our Wonder & Joy readers. Her essay illustrates how books lead us deeper into community, contemplation and faith.
Read MoreCome to the school tonight to discuss Fr. Luigi Giussani’s The Journey to Truth is an Experience. No need to read (or even to have) the book!
6-8 p.m.
Read MoreHumanity is crucial in a crisis!
Read MoreYou could try to write like Chesterton!
Read MorePlease put second Mondays on your calendar!
Read MoreWords are living things! Parts of speech correspond to your own becoming. Your freedom begins in words.
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