Recovering the lost tools of learning

an approach to distinctively Christian education

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Last edited by MARC Bot
August 22, 2024 | History

Recovering the lost tools of learning

an approach to distinctively Christian education

  • 11 Want to read
  • 1 Currently reading
  • 1 Have read

"It is not possible for education to be nonreligious, deliberately excluding the basic questions about life ... [Wilson] argues for a return to classical education, firm discipline, and the requirement of hard work."--Back cover.

Publish Date
Publisher
Crossway Books
Language
English
Pages
215

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Recovering the lost tools of learning
Recovering the lost tools of learning: an approach to distinctively Christian education
1991, Crossway Books
Paperback in English

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Book Details


Table of Contents

Part one : The failure of modern secular education.
The education crisis
Suggested secular and Christian reforms
Part two : An approach to distinctively Christian education.
The true ministry of education
The nature of knowledge
The student in Adam
Part three : An approach to distinctively classical education.
The classical mind
The trivium and the Christian school
The obstacles of modernity
The problem of "pious" ignorance
The home school alternative
Part four : Conclusions.
The limits of the state : a summary
The need for classical and Christian education : a summary
Appendices.
The lost tools of learning
Logos school curriculum material
A brief historical sketch
Notes
Select bibliography

Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p.[209]) and indexes.

Published in
Wheaton, Ill
Series
Turning point Christian worldview series

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
370.11/4
Library of Congress
LC311 .W55 1991, LC311.W55 1991

The Physical Object

Format
Paperback
Pagination
215 p.
Number of pages
215

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL1870529M
Internet Archive
recoveringlostto00wils
ISBN 10
0891075836
LCCN
90029904
OCLC/WorldCat
23017165
Library Thing
149394
Goodreads
547283

Work Description

Public education in America has run into hard times. Even many within the system admit that it is failing. While many factors contribute, Douglas Wilson lays much blame on the idea that education can take place in a moral vacuum. It is not possible for education to be nonreligious, deliberately excluding the basic questions about life. All education builds on the foundations of someone's worldview (teacher's, curriculum writer's). Education deals with fundamental questions that require religous answers. Learning to read and write is simply the process of acquiring the tools to ask and answer such questions. A second reason for the failure of public schools, Wilson feels, is modern teaching methods. He argues for a return to a classical education, firm discipline, and the requirement of hard work. Often educational reforms create new problems that must be solved down the road. This book presents alternatives that have proved workable in experience. - Back cover.

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History

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