2026 Symposium Program

KEYNOTES:

Classical Education in America: What It Was and Can Be Again
Christopher Perrin
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The tradition of classical, liberal arts education in America was present from the beginning of the nation and before. Both the flowers and seeds of this tradition were carried forth across the Atlantic in the Niña, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria. The tradition was embedded in the Mayflower Pact and in the governing norms of the Massachusetts Bay colony. It can be seen flourishing in the Federalist Papers and in the Constitution – what Chesterton called the creed upon which the United States was founded. In this presentation, we will trace the flowering of this tradition, noting the ways in which American education flourished and then slowly withered; but then also noting the ways it is remerging with new vitality, like those perennials that seem to disappear in the winter only to come back in the spring in greater numbers.

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The Science of Reading (Books)
Doug Lemov
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The educational psychologist Daniel Willingham notes that we have learned more about how people learn in the last 25 years than in the previous 2500 and yet much of that learning remains under utilized in our schools and classrooms – and nowhere is that more true than in the area of reading. In this talk, Doug Lemov summarizes seven key research-backed principles that should guide reading instruction “post phonics” – that is, after students have learned their letter sound correspondence through systematic, synthetic phonics – and he spends a little extra time discussing perhaps the most surprising of the seven principles – the idea that reading books – whole books, great ones, together as a class – is one of the most important things teachers can do to foster achievement and knowledge.

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Exodus and the American Founding
Susan McWilliam Barndt
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The most cited piece of literature in the political speeches, sermons, and publications of the American founding is not a work of Enlightenment scholarship. It’s not a work of modern political philosophy. In fact, it’s about as far from a modern piece of writing as a piece of writing can be. The most cited piece of literature in the American founding is the biblical story of the Exodus – and it’s not a close competition. In this talk, I’ll reveal the important and often surprising role that the ancient story of the Exodus played in the American founding, particularly during the first week of July in 1776. I’ll also talk about what we can learn about American politics and history if we come to appreciate the place of the ancient Exodus, not just in the American founding but in American political thought (and particularly African-American political thought) more generally.

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SCHOLARLY TALKS:

Consensus and Friction in Madison and Jefferson’s Great Collaboration
Alan Gibson

James Madison and Thomas Jefferson were fast friends and productive political collaborators from their first meeting in 1776 to Jefferson’s death in 1826. Both were enthusiastic supporters of religious liberty, democratic republicanism, and constitutionalism. Nevertheless, their political beliefs were most often synergetic but never synonymous and were the source of occasional sparks of friction and moments of disagreement, especially in the years surrounding the drafting and ratification of the Constitution. This presentation will explore the contours and (occasional) conflicts in Madison and Jefferson’s lifelong Great Collaboration.


The Audacity of Mathematics: A Paradigm Shift Revealing Its Beauty, Power, and Relevance
James Tanton

Every few years, a seemingly simple math challenge circulates on social media, sparking heated debates and passionate disagreements. This viral puzzle not only divides opinions but also unveils society’s perceptions of mathematical thinking, the definition of “success” in learning mathematics, and the purpose of mathematical activity itself. The challenge? It asks: What is the value of 8 ÷ 2(2 + 2)? In this talk, we will unpack this “innocent” internet puzzle to reveal deeper insights about mathematics. By examining its implications and the debates it inspires, we’ll explore a bold and transformative mathematical stance—one that challenges conventional expectations and offers a perspective entirely orthogonal to the assumptions embedded in the meme. Join us as we uncover the profound beauty, extraordinary power, and undeniable relevance of mathematics in this playful yet thought-provoking exploration.


Lincoln and the Declaration
Michael Zuckert

Lincoln frequently appealed to the Declaration – what did it mean to him? What did he think it meant to the Americans of 1860? What did it mean regarding slavery?


Reviving the Study of Western Civilization
James Hankins, Tunku Varadarajan

American high schools and colleges stopped teaching Western civilization courses 40 years ago, replacing them, if at all, with courses on global history. Prof. Hankins, author (with Allen Guelzo) of The Golden Thread: A History of the Western Tradition (Encounter Books), will discuss why he believes the study of the civilizations of the West needs to be revived today and the benefits of narrative history as a tool of high school education.


Lex Natura, Lex Americana
Henry Olsen

All societies seek to educate their young in the ways and morays of their people. Throughout most of history, this meant instruction in the specific manners, laws, and customs practiced in the tribe, the clan, or the nation. But America was from its outset a different nation, a Novo Ordo Seclorum, and as such required a different sort of education. America is ultimately a nation based on an idea that all tribes, clans, or nations share a common humanity and are subject to common rules. Thus, instruction in the specific manners and customs of America necessarily requires instruction in the discovery and understanding of those common elements of life and existence. That is precisely what classical education seeks to achieve. It inculcates reasoning rather than rote learning, inquiry rather than obedience, and a search for truth that can be proven to and accepted by all rather than an assertion that what is believed by Americans is simply true. Classical education is not reliant on an established canon of texts, although certain texts have proven to be more instructive than others in leading their readers toward the good, the true, and the beautiful. It is not a revealed religion; it is an ongoing journey based on a core principle. In that sense, classical education is indispensable to American identity and its future. Modern deviations from that model are all essentially merely modern versions of the ancient modes of establishing particular truths based on assertion and force. The trend toward denying biological truths, toward asserting there are certain types of sciences, and toward classifying individuals according to immutable physical characteristics are all adaptations of the antique idea that the opinions regnant in any particular city are true for all cities regardless of their foundation in evidence or argument that members of other cities can be persuaded to adopt. These modern versions of “education” are thus fatal to the American regime. Only a return to the classical approach can renew and reaffirm America’s promise and identity.


Keeping the Promise: The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution
James Stoner

Historians and other scholars have debated whether the Constitution fulfills or betrays the promise of the Declaration. Usually the question is put in general terms: Is the Constitution sufficiently democratic? Do its protections for property, especially slavery, contradict the idea that “all men are created equal”? Does its accommodation of state sovereignty undermine the revolutionary action of “one people”? I will focus more particularly on the two documents themselves and will show that every violation alleged in the Declaration’s list of grievances is guarded against by a specific provision of the Constitution or the Bill of Rights. Establishing the fidelity of the Constitution on particulars of political and personal liberty will bring fresh perspective to the larger question of its emancipatory potential, later fulfilled by the Civil War Amendments.


Teaching Students to Feel Pleasure and Pain at the Wrong Things: The History and Practice of Grades and Grading
Brian Williams

Despite their ubiquity and widespread acceptance in contemporary education, formal grading systems are relatively recent innovations in the history and philosophy of education. Far from innocuous tools which aid the student’s academic development, grades and grading systems developed as ad hoc tools for ranking students against one another in academic competitions. This talk will examine the history of assessment, grades, and grading in light of the longer tradition of education and suggests alternative practices could better orient students toward the true, good, and beautiful. By understanding how and why contemporary approaches to grades developed, classical educators will be equipped to mitigate the unintended and often unseen adverse consequences grades have on their students. Hopefully, the session will liberate teachers and students to pursue the intrinsic goods of learning over against the fleeting and extrinsic rewards of making the grade.


Washington and Hamilton: The Indispensable Alliance
Stephen Knott

This talk will examine the critical role played by two key statesmen from the founding era: George Washington and Alexander Hamilton. The extraordinary relationship between Washington and Hamilton shaped not only the contours of presidential power but all aspects of the American experiment. I will argue that Washington and Hamilton forged the indispensable alliance of the early republic, and in so doing, created “an empire . . . in many respects the most interesting in the world.” Both men fought to convince their fellow citizens to abandon parochial interests and “think continentally.” These men were the leading nationalists of the founding generation: they wanted the citizenry to think of themselves as Americans, not as Virginians or New Yorkers. Their partnership, founded on mutual respect despite occasional disagreements, endured through the revolution and contributed to building the nation’s political and economic institutions. While serving as Washington’s aide-de-camp during the American Revolution, Hamilton played a critical role — not only in military matters but also by contributing ideas that would later influence the development of a strong central government. Together, Washington and Hamilton navigated the uncertainties of independence, blending pragmatism and principle as they confronted the practical realities of governance. It is my belief that without George Washington and Alexander Hamilton, the American Revolution would likely have failed, as would the ratification of the U.S. Constitution. While Thomas Jefferson’s eloquent rhetoric continues to inspire, it was due to the nation-building efforts of these two statesmen that we can celebrate America’s semiquincentennial in 2026.


Theodore Roosevelt and the Jews
Andrew Porwancher

Join Professor Andrew Porwancher as he uncovers the close-knit and often surprising relationship between Theodore Roosevelt and the Jewish community. This lecture traces Roosevelt’s deep connection with the Jewish people at every step of his dazzling ascent. But it also reveals a man of profound contradictions. Drawing on fresh research from his newest book, American Maccabee, Porwancher explores the complicated bond between the leader of a youthful nation and the people of an ancient faith.


The Apportionment of the House of Representatives: A Drama of Politics and Mathematics
Jake Tawney

The House of Representatives has always been something of the “people’s house” in the legislative branch of American government. Its membership is determined by population and popular vote. The Constitution of the United States says that the actual number of seats given to each state should be “according to their respective Numbers,” which hints at proportionality. However, the Constitution is strangely silent on how this calculation is to be carried out. The heart of the matter is a mathematical problem with massive political ramifications. While politics is always interesting and complicated, in this case, the mathematics gives the politics a run for its money. How did the Framers and the early statesmen set about to allocate seats in the House of Representatives? How did that method change with the passing of each decennial census? More importantly, how did existing political realities influence the choice of method, and how did the choice of method influence future politics? Finally, why do we not hear about this controversy much today? This talk is a short narrative history that will explore these and other questions as we consider the problem of apportionment in the House of Representatives.

LEADERSHIP SESSIONS:

Instructional Coaching Seminar
Mary Chin, Jennifer Ramirez

We will read a short excerpt from Norms and Nobility and have seminar discussions through the lens of instructional coaching. If teachers can only teach from who they are, what they love, and what they know, how do we best support them as they engage in life-long learning? What are the roadblocks for teacher learning and how can a coach help dismantle them? No pre-work required; come with curiosity and your experience and we look forward to an energetic and thoughtful conversation.


Leading Classical Schools in an Unclassical World
Eric Cook

Although the classical school movement has seen extraordinary growth and interest, in many ways, it has done so in the face of immense obstacles. The current cultural milieu is almost entirely tilted against classical ideals and the classical model. The vast majority of American parents have hardly heard of classical education, much less been trained in the liberal arts. Among many, the classical tradition represents bigotry, misogyny, and the wrong vision for forming children. It is among these barriers and in this context that our school leaders must serve and shepherd their school communities. How can leaders articulate a clear, compelling vision for classical education? How can they embody the ideals and values of the tradition in ways that meet parents where they are? How can heads of school develop a vision for partnership that helps parents embrace the good, true, and beautiful things that the classical model provides? This session will explore these questions and equip leaders with the language, tools, and courage to lead their classical schools in an unclassical world.


Teaching Teenagers: A Classical Vision to Reach an Anxious Generation
Dan Scoggin

This workshop will discuss the cultural and personal headwinds our teens encounter in fully embracing a classical education today. How can we as school leaders and teachers create better conditions for them so they can seek virtue authentically? We will discuss teaching and motivational strategies that enable teens in our schools to find their unique potential within a lasting tradition of excellence.


Leveraging Questions in Instructional Coaching: APEX Course Highlight
Mary Chin, Jennifer Ramirez

This session will focus on the art of asking questions through an instructional coaching lens. We know that students thrive in discovery-style learning environments. How does this translate to instructional coaching? We will ground this discussion in an excerpt from the Paideia Proposal before workshopping practical questions to use in feedback meetings. This session will also highlight the Instructional Coaching Principles and Practices APEX course that will next run June-September 2026.


Leadership and Classical Education: Four Distinct Challenges for the Leaders of Classical Schools
Helen Hayes

This workshop identifies four challenges that operate in unique ways for the leader of a classical school and that make the job distinct from leadership of non-classical schools. It is unlikely that you will emerge having mastered these challenges, as they reflect the magnitude of classical education itself. For instance, your teachers might wish to produce lifelong learners, might even know what actions are conducive to doing so, and still have a long way to travel before having consistent success in cultivating lifelong learners. How do you inspire your teachers and equip them toward the goal of becoming lifelong learners?


Capital Campaigns for Classical Schools: From Discernment to Launch
Mallory Staley

Whether you’re contemplating your first capital campaign or managing one already underway, this training offers strategic insights for every phase of the journey. We’ll begin by examining the foundational work that precedes any successful campaign—from assessing institutional readiness to building the leadership infrastructure necessary for a major fundraising initiative. School leaders will gain clarity on the critical questions to answer before publicly launching a campaign. The real test of a campaign, however, comes after the initial excitement fades. This training addresses the obstacles that frequently emerge once a campaign is in motion: construction budgets that escalate beyond projections, donor engagement that loses momentum, and the challenge of securing transformational gifts rather than incremental ones. Participants will learn proven approaches for maintaining campaign vitality and adapting strategy when circumstances shift. For schools considering consecutive campaigns or already planning their next initiative, we’ll discuss sustainable fundraising models that protect donor relationships while advancing institutional priorities. The session will conclude with essential post-campaign practices—the often-overlooked work that determines whether a campaign creates lasting advancement capacity and how you can retain and cultivate new funding sources.


Common Heresies in Classical Education
Alex Julian

So many schools call themselves classical today, but are often teaching and operating in ways that are antithetical to their mission. In this talk, Alex Julian will explore some of the most common “heresies” in classical schools, and offer a vision of what the best classical schools are doing to achieve their mission.


Helping Your Teachers Find Success in the Classroom
Suzanne Meledeo 

Join me for a workshop that will help you create a semester long course for your teachers to help them find success in the classroom. This course marries the beauty of classical curriculum, pedagogy, and philosophy with practical classroom management techniques. Teachers meet weekly over the semester to seminar on assigned texts and discuss practical classroom management methods they have tried in their classrooms. We will work together to identify the needs of your teachers to create a personalized course for your school. I look forward to working together to help each of you craft a course that meets the needs of your teachers and helps them find greater success.


The Future of Classical Education in America: Solving the Talent Need
Erik Twist

The classical renewal depends on one thing: people. Yet the movement faces an urgent and widening talent gap. In this session, Arcadia President Erik Twist will share a proven, system-level approach to solving the pipeline problem — from uncovering hidden teacher markets and forging recruitment pathways to building institutional infrastructure that attracts, supports, and retains mission-aligned educators. Drawing on Arcadia’s work with networks, dioceses, and new school launches nationwide, this session will offer practical tools and strategic insights for anyone serious about staffing the future of classical education. If you’re facing a talent crunch, don’t miss this.


The Art of Storytelling – Headline‑Worthy Content for Schools
Shannon Richards-Nieves, Jason Moore

Every school has stories worth telling—but not every story is told in a way that captures attention, builds trust, and drives growth. In this workshop, participants will learn how to identify and shape stories that resonate both inside their school community and with the broader public. We’ll explore practical strategies for creating headline-worthy content that maximizes your digital footprint. From writing compelling headlines that draw readers in, to incorporating SEO-friendly code snippets that boost visibility, you’ll walk away with concrete tools to make your school’s stories travel further and work harder online. This workshop will highlight how storytelling serves a dual purpose: strengthening engagement with current families while reaching new audiences to support long-term enrollment growth. Whether you’re a school leader, marketer, or educator, you’ll leave with a framework for turning everyday school moments into meaningful, shareable narratives that connect with parents, donors, and the wider community.


Achieving Excellence – Great Hearts Academic Improvement Framework
Heather Washburn

Great Hearts transforms challenges into opportunities through its refined Academic Improvement Framework. After two decades of proving that all children are classically educable, we have developed a powerful three-tier support system that ensures no academy stands alone. This presentation highlights the practical tools and collaborative processes that identify schools in need, mobilize targeted resources through steering committees and working teams, and chart measurable pathways to improvement — all while staying true to our classical mission. Whether you are a headmaster, regional leader, or teacher, you’ll gain actionable insights into how data-informed assessments, strategic goal-setting, and coordinated professional development sustain excellence across our network —because when one academy thrives, we all thrive.

K-5 WORKSHOPS:

The Way We Live: The Ingalls Family’s Pioneer Virtue
Mandi Gerth

In 2025, Laura Ingalls Wilder’s Little House on the Prairie celebrated its 90th anniversary. This beloved classic remains central to the Great Hearts elementary school canon alongside Little House in the Big Woods and Farmer Boy. Even as it becomes increasingly harder for our scholars to imagine the life of an American pioneer, we continue to point our students to the civic and moral virtue which shapes our national character, virtues we see in the Ingalls family. In this workshop, we will look at ways the Little House series shapes the moral imagination of our scholars by taking them inside unique struggles faced by this lovable family on the Western frontier of America. As Laura herself said, “the way we live and [our] schools are much different now, so many changes have made living and learning easier. But the real things haven’t changed. It is still best to be honest and truthful; to make the most of what we have; to be happy with simple pleasures and to be cheerful and have courage when things go wrong.”


The Socratic K-5 Classroom 101: An Introduction (Introductory Session)
Jerilyn Olson

Session for First Time Attendees
K-5 teachers often wonder how the Socratic Method applies in a K-5 classroom – are kindergartners really supposed to seminar on Aristotle? In this workshop, we will discuss lesson planning with inquiry in mind, unit introductions that inspire wonder, and the questions that follow. For Great Hearts Staff: Please note that this is the same workshop offered at Great Hearts New Faculty Orientation.


American Legends That Shape Our Moral Imaginations: Folktales and Tall Tales
Alexis Mausolf

The ideals expressed in the Declaration of Independence reverberate down the ages and find their echoes in well-known American tales, such as Paul Revere, Johnny Appleseed, Rip Van Winkle, and Paul Bunyan. In this workshop, learn how the legends and folktales native to American soil have helped shape our national identity and values since this nation’s inception, and how they can continue to form your students’ moral imaginations. You will be provided with practical ideas for approaching American folklore in the K-5 classroom, and concrete ways to weave it into the various subjects you teach, in order to expand your students’ knowledge and sensibilities, and to prepare them for lives of virtuous citizenship.


What Singapore Math Offers the American Experiment
Jessica Kaminski

Mathematics is unchanging in its beauty. It’s a discipline that helps us make sense of the world through logic, precision, and truth. Yet throughout the American experiment, math instruction has often been shaped by passing trends rather than enduring principles. In this session, we’ll look to Singapore, a global leader in mathematics education, for four timeless strategies that support deep understanding and lasting success: an upward spiral curriculum, a balance of conceptual and procedural knowledge, research-based teaching practices, and an emphasis on problem-solving. While we cannot fully replicate Singapore’s system, we can apply these core principles to meet the needs of our unique students, guiding them toward truth through the logical beauty of mathematics.


Exploring the Tradition and Benefits of Language Immersion for Classical Education
Liliana Worth

Hadar Jewish Classical Academy is pioneering a rigorous Hebrew immersion program, for mostly students from English-speaking homes that exposes and engages children as young as three in a Hebrew-speaking environment to maximize the language acquisition capacity of young minds. Our Pre-K and K sections offer almost full immersion in Hebrew during the school day with minimal instruction time in English allotted to basic numeracy and literacy. As the students move up the grades, they continue with their Hebrew immersion for Jewish studies, Hebrew literature, and Hebrew conversation and Israeli studies, within a framework that establishes a strong framework at the younger years and tapers off to allow more time for core classical English-speaking instruction in Math, English, History, and Latin. Even within our first two years of the immersion program, we have noted remarkable benefits: in addition to developing their second language proficiency, we have observed that our students show tendencies that suggest bilingual language processing, a stronger ability to navigate academic challenges and ambiguous environments, good linguistic sensitivity in English, and an openness to learning additional languages such as Latin. Finally, the provision of Hebrew allows our students to engage with the most ancient tradition and heritage of the West, and access the scriptures and philosphy at the roots of our American classical education.


A Reading of the Brothers Grimm’s Little Red Riding Hood
Vigen Guroian

Charles Perrault’s Little Red Riding Hood is the version of the fairy tale with which most Americans are familiar. His telling of the story is moralistic. The meaning is spelled unambiguously in the moral he attaches to it: Pretty girls/Innocent of life’s dangers,/Shouldn’t stop and chat with strangers. The Brothers Grimm’s telling is a story of salvation symbolized by what the mother gives Little Red Riding Hood to take to her grandmother’s home. In Perrault’s version the mother gives Little Red Riding Hood a loaf and butter to carry to the grandmother’s home. In the Grimms’ version she carries a cake and wine to the grandmother, an allusion to the Christian eucharist. This is enough to get us started. The rest I will leave for when we meet. I hope we can have good conversation.


Before They Can Read – Building Literacy Through Picture Books
Robert Pondiscio

Long before children decode their first words, they are acquiring the vocabulary, background knowledge, and habits of mind that will make fluent reading possible. This session explores how rich read-alouds and carefully chosen picture books build language proficiency and cultural literacy in the early years. We’ll consider how picture books expand vocabulary, sharpen narrative sense, and cultivate shared knowledge – and how teachers can use them to prepare students for more demanding texts.


Making Thinking Visible
Marisa Cook

Did you know that some studies have found that on average, teachers spend at least 89% of the lesson talking? Have you ever done your best learning while listening to someone talk this much? This session will focus on why students learn best when we transfer the heavy lifting onto the students and how learning is a consequence of thinking. We will cover different strategies that will allow your students to fully engage in the material while simultaneously providing you a window into their thinking, long before you give an assessment!


Syntax Unlocking Symbolism: What Students Should Know About Grammar K-6
Christen Arbogast

What can the structure of a sentence tell us about the greater meaning of text? Teaching grammar can be difficult in the lower schools, not only because students are expected to know the categories and functions of words, but also because students often don’t see the purpose behind such knowledge. Understanding that grammar helps students look closer at a text, the study of grammar can open sentences to greater clarity and beauty. In this workshop, participants will work through a pedagogical philosophy of teaching grammar and see how understanding form and structure unlocks the deeper beauty behind great sentences in children’s classic literature.


Renewing through Rhythm: A Midyear Reset for Educators
Lisa Ann Dillon

Are you asking yourself if you are doing enough, getting it right, meeting the needs of all your students and hitting all the classical benchmarks you have set? Midyear, this is where many teachers land and you can find yourself losing the spark with which you began the year. Sometimes, we just get things out of focus. In this session, you are invited to recalibrate the sites through which you see your students and yourselves. Through the lens of wonder and curiosity, we can identify the most important First Things for you to concentrate on. By initiating liturgical rhythms both in your classroom and in your life outside of work, you can get back into the right rhythm. This session will provide you with practical ideas keeping the concepts of renewed energy, real solutions to challenges, and a solid list of things to try on Monday morning. As teachers, you have the best solutions. We’ll hold space for identification and brainstorming enhanced by some tips and tricks I have learned from nearly 30 years in the classroom. Some of this will include ways to incorporate repetitio mater memoriae (repetition is the mother of memory) into your daily transitions, decreasing misbehavior and increasing the minutes you have in a day! Let’s get you re-energized for the rest of your school year and hopefully even for life!


Developing Number Sense Through K–8 Learning Trajectories
Jessica Kaminski

Let’s take a guided tour through the Numbers in Base Ten concepts from Kindergarten through Grade 8, revealing the carefully sequenced development of number sense. Participants will explore how learning trajectories illuminate the conceptual journey students take as they build procedural fluency, deepen understanding, and apply mathematical reasoning. By tracing this arc of content, educators will gain insight into where their instruction fits within the broader progression and how to support students in making meaningful mathematical connections across the grades. This session is ideal for those seeking a clearer picture of how operations are developed and how to meet students who are at varying levels of understanding.

6-12 WORKSHOPS:

The Etymology of Independence: Latin and the Declaration
David Jackson

This talk will examine the etymological origins of the Declaration of Independence, providing a lexical analysis of the text as well as a detailed explanation of the Latinate vocabulary and word choice expressed in the document. The session will also include materials on teaching a lesson on this topic (geared toward middle and high school aged students).


Educating the American Mind: The Proper Role of Patriotism in American Education
Andrew Carico

Can a free nation survive without patriotic citizens? A proper love of country is essential for a nation’s endurance. Patriotism is often nurtured in institutions such as the family and local community—but what is the appropriate role of American K–12 schools in cultivating patriotism and preparing future generations of patriotic citizens? Moreover, what sources can help us thoughtfully engage this question? This workshop explores the role of education in fostering what Ronald Reagan called an informed patriotism—a virtuous patriotism that exists between both an excessive and deficient love of country. Drawing on original sources from political philosophy, the American Founding, and Abraham Lincoln, this workshop explores specific ways that patriotism can be meaningfully incorporated both within the framework of a school’s daily programming and within secondary course curriculum.


Constitutional Law and Classical Education: How High School Law Review Cultivates Agreeable Disagreement
Olivia Gross, Joshua Dunn, Ian Rowe

How does constitutional law fit within a classical curriculum? High School Law Review invites students to grapple with Supreme Court cases through close reading, structured debate, and publication in school-based law reviews. This workshop will demonstrate how the program works in a school setting and how it reinforces the classical emphasis on logic, rhetoric, and dialectic. We will also consider the importance of rewarding students’ investment in these values, through network and state-wide reviews that recognize top student work. Together we’ll explore how legal study sharpens critical thinking, nurtures civic literacy, and models respectful disagreement—equipping students to pursue truth with rigor and humility.


The Tensions of Teaching an American Tradition that Casts Off Tradition
Jared Dybzinski

The classical vision for education believes actual Truth, Goodness, and Beauty exist outside the desires and formulations of the individual self. It believes this triad is real and timeless and waiting to shape – not be shaped by – the individual and community. This sets up a tension with an American literary tradition with a poet like Walt Whitman at its core – a poet who aptheosizes the individual, poetic voice in an attempt to speak for the people as a whole. American literature (and history and values) wrestles with the competing tensions, eventually producing a character like Fitzgerald’s Jay Gatsby- the logical end of the unbounded American self. This workshop will spend half the time laying out the tension in American history and literature and the other half discussing what this means for classical educators rooted in a metaphysically realist version of the self instead of a nominalist one. How do we stay faithful to actual Truth, Goodness, and Beauty and the tradition passed on to us by the great thinkers and writers and artists in the midst of a cultural tradition at odds with some of these premises? The discussion should be lively and well worth an occasion celebrating the 250th anniversary of our noble nation’s founding.


Beyond Grammar: The Noble Latin Legacy of America’s Founding Fathers
Guillermo Dillo

As the United States marks its 250th anniversary, it is timely to revisit the intellectual roots of the American experiment, especially the crucial but often misunderstood role of Latin and classical learning in shaping the Founding Fathers’ vision for the nation. This talk will first illuminate how deeply the founders engaged with Latin, not merely as an academic exercise, but as a living tradition that informed their thinking, provided a common vocabulary, and connected them to the virtues and civic ideals of the ancient world. Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and John Adams mastered Latin and read the great Roman historians, orators, and poets in the original language. For these men, classical education was a wellspring of wisdom, shaping their understanding of liberty, governance, and citizenship. The second part of the talk challenges prevailing justifications for Latin in American classical schools. It is common to hear that Latin sharpens test scores, boosts verbal SAT results, and reinforces English grammar. Yet while these outcomes may be real, they risk reducing Latin study to mere utilitarian benefit. Instead, this presentation draws on the example of the Founders, urging educators and school leaders to seek higher aims: formation in virtue, cultivation of eloquence, and participation in a tradition that binds the American project to enduring questions of justice and human flourishing. By examining both the historical reality and aspirational legacy of the Founders’ classical education, attendees will leave with a deeper understanding of how Latin can inspire purpose in today’s students, i.e. not only as a tool for academic success, but as a key ingredient in nurturing thoughtful, articulate citizens ready to steward the American experiment into its next century.


Bard in the USA
Nick Hutchison

In honor of the anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, eminent Shakespearean editor, author and ASU Regents Professor Sir Jonathan Bate, and renowned theatre director and teacher Nick Hutchison present a dynamic workshop celebrating Shakespeare’s place in the American consciousness in the last 250 years, looking at prominent American Shakespearean actors and commentators from the Revolution onwards, discussing the place of the plays in a newly-independent nation and beyond, and considering the differing approaches to his works on either side of the Atlantic.


Pillars of the Republic: Teaching Institutions in Classical Education
Leah Murray

Teaching institutions within a classical education setting is important because it connects deep text-based learning to civic literacy, preparing students to become responsible citizens who understand the foundations of society and government. Classical education emphasizes knowledge for its own sake, critical thinking skills, and moral virtue, all of which are essential in guiding young people to appreciate the role of being people of good character so they can lead meaningful, flourishing lives. By studying the traditions that underpin institutions, students not only develop strong analytical abilities but also cultivate ethical perspectives that prepare them for self-governance and thoughtful participation in civic life. This session will engage participants in learning how to implement pedagogy that embeds an understanding of institutions in a text-based approach to learning civics.


America’s 250th Anniversary: Leading a Lively Seminar on John Locke’s Second Treatise of Government
Jeannette DeCelles-Zwerneman

The 250th Anniversary of America’s Founding is an especially fitting time to study those writers who influenced the founders. Second only to Montesquieu, John Locke was one of the most cited political thinkers at the American Constitutional Convention, and his thought continues to hold a central place in debates over America’s liberal political tradition and intellectual culture. His Second Treatise of Civil Government is a particularly suitable text for seminar students at the secondary level, and its treatment would mark a significant contribution to their understanding of the founding. This workshop will consist of a brief introduction to how to lead students through the Treatise. Then, for the bulk of our time, we will discuss one or two short selections to give teachers a foundation for leading a seminar on Locke with their students. Participants will experience a discussion under the leadership of a master teacher who has led hundreds of students through Locke’s classic work. Further, each participant will receive a complimentary copy of Cana Academy’s comprehensive guide, Leading a Seminar on Locke’s Second Treatise of Civil Government.


From Sea to Shining Sea: Two American Sonnets
Betsy K. Brown McClelland

Join poet and teacher Betsy K. Brown in exploring two American sonnets, one classic and one new. Brown will lead several activities that can be replicated in the classroom and will focus on the question, what do these two sonnets teach us about being an American?


Logic: Inquiry to Seeking Truth — Forming Confident Thinkers Across the Disciplines
Joelle Hodge

Logic is not a boutique class for the precocious; it is the operating system of a life aimed at wisdom. The aim of teaching logic is not partisan victory, religious gatekeeping, or clever one-liners, but the formation of students who can confidently pursue what is true, good, and beautiful — and then live accordingly. Situated within the liberal arts and a life of virtue, this talk places logic inside a rightly ordered love: grammar gives language, logic tests it, and rhetoric carries sound judgment to others. Answers are often arguments in disguise; and information is never benign; it comes with premises, relevance claims, and assumptions. Teachers signal premises every time they respond to a “why;” question with “because,” and students must learn to evaluate those reasons for truth and clarity. We will recover the three acts of the mind — simple apprehension, judgment, and inference — and show how inductive and deductive patterns move learners from words to concepts to things to ideas, and finally toward truth. The session confronts three damaging confusions: first, mistaking a stand-alone logic course for a sufficient cure-all (logic is necessary but not sufficient); second, grading primarily for recall while neglecting reasoning; and third, tolerating curricular silos that sever method from content. The payoff is not merely sharper essays; it is moral and intellectual courage. Students who trust their ability to reason become adults who can weigh evidence, resist manipulation, pursue justice wisely, with disciplined minds. Drawing on the classical witnesses from Hugh of St. Victor and Rhabanus Maurus, this talk offers both mandate and method. Attendees will leave with a shared vocabulary, practical exercises, and a plan to model logical thinking so that students become like their teachers—in this case, thinkers who seek truth with humility and skill.


The American Experiment and the Politics of Science: Reflections on Science as Civic Education in a Moment of Challenged Democracy
Ben Hurlbut

Science has long figured centrally in American democracy. Indeed, the conception of the American “experiment” was inflected with a scientific sensibility. The incorporation of science education into higher ed in the 19th and 20th centuries was as much about the cultivation of civic virtues as it was about bolstering the practical arts. Yet this thread has been largely lost in science education, even as science — and the public authority of scientific expertise — has become a locus of significant contestation and fracture in contemporary American democracy. This talk will reflect on the relationship between science and American democracy, exploring how contemporary political challenges offer an opportunity — and an imperative — for a better understanding of that relation and how it can inform approaches to both scientific and civic education.


Patterns: What to Do When You Trust Them and Even More Fun When You Don’t!
James Tanton

What’s the next number in this sequence: 2, 4, 6, 8, __? Clearly, it’s 17 — and we’ll prove it in this session! As humans, we’re naturally drawn to patterns. They excite us, motivate us, and help us make sense of the world. But should we always trust a pattern? Not until we have an iron-clad, logical explanation to back it up! In this session, we’ll dive into the joy of mathematical patterns. We’ll explore how to find formulas for patterns — if you decide to trust them — and discover creative ways to challenge and subvert them when you don’t. Come prepared for mischief, curiosity, and plenty of mathematical fun!


American Art and the Celebration of the Common Man: Whitman, Eakins, Copeland
Nathan Antiel

One of the greatest achievements of the American experiment was the development of a distinctly American fine arts tradition. As Walt Whitman observed in 1855, “The Americans of all nations at any time upon the earth have probably the fullest poetical nature. The United States themselves are essentially the greatest poem.” Yet the arts rarely feature in our history, literature, and humane letters courses except to illustrate ideas. This workshop will lead participants to encounter poetry, painting, and classical music not as a thing to be understood but as beauty to be experienced, thereby equipping teachers to facilitate such experiences in their own classrooms. Drawing on the poetry of Whitman, the painting of Eakins, and the music of Copeland, the art encountered will center on a predominant theme of the American arts tradition: the celebration of the common man.


To Teach with Gentle Means
Nick Hutchison

Nick Hutchison teaches Shakespeare in Drama Schools and Colleges across the Globe (and indeed at the Globe in London), and brings new life to what can be a dry and off-putting exercise. In this lively, interactive workshop he will look at ways of teaching the plays which will inspire, enlighten and enthuse students in ways far removed from conventional approaches to Shakespeare, and encourage them to find their own journeys into these wonderful plays.


Helping Students Carry the Weight of Learning: Practices that Inspire Curiosity and Responsibility
Corinne Jacobson

Students flourish when they are invited to share in the responsibility of their own learning journey. In this session, participants will explore pedagogical practices that support students in carrying the intellectual and emotional weight of learning, while sparking wonder that sustains their effort. Through examples, discussion, and reflection, we will consider how teachers can cultivate classroom cultures where rigor and joy work together to form resilient, curious learners.


Teaching Benjamin Franklin’s Autobiography<
Peter McNamara

Franklin’s Autobiography is multilayered. Franklin was a genius but he did not simply write for geniuses or even potential geniuses. He wrote also for the common man and without condescension. The challenge of reading and teaching Franklin is to do justice to both sides of Franklin’s teaching.

K-12 WORKSHOPS:

An American Classical Pedagogy (Introductory Session)
Jonathan Gregg

Session for First Time Attendees
While many of the primary drivers of classical pedagogy – the Socratic method, the liberal arts, etc.- trace their roots to more ancient sources, the principles of the American founding – liberty, federalism, equality, etc. – provide an equally compelling ground from which to derive the principles of high-quality teaching. That is, while we may not want to copy-paste the exact educational methods from early American schools, we should feel compelled to teach in light of the ethos of the founding fathers, inheriting, preserving, and passing down the spirit with which our country was born. This session promises to articulate a set of American classical pedagogical principles and then provide teachers practical guidance for how those principles might be enacted in K-12 classrooms across all subjects and grade levels.


With Right Reason & Moral Imagination: Teaching American History
Andrew Zwerneman

History is a liberal discipline within the humanities. Proper to its distinctive scope, history cultivates knowledge of the past and practical wisdom concerning our responsibilities in the present, enables a society to exist across generations, and fosters sympathies that bind a citizenry, even one as diverse as America’s. This workshop explores effective ways to teach American history toward all three objectives unique to history as a field of humane studies.


Evoking Wonder in Scholars in Online Academies
Tammy Morrow

Those of us who are involved in classical liberal arts education are convinced that this education is essential for sustaining a healthy democratic society. This conviction leads us to consider how we can offer a classical liberal arts education to children who live in remote or rural areas of our nation, where brick and mortar classical schools are unavailable to them. More and more, we are seeing this question answered through online classical schools. The concept of online schools, which often utilize asynchronous education, can create tension with certain aspects of the classical tradition. In this workshop, we will consider how we can evoke and nurture a sense of wonder in our online scholars. We will consider how our online scholars can join into conversation with each other and with the Western Tradition.


Teach Like a Champion Workshop
Doug Lemov, Robert Pondiscio

Doug Lemov and Robert Pondiscio will lead a workshop addressing the best techniques for whole class reading of (ideally, great) books.


Classical Riffs: Conversing Classically with Jazz Music
Junius Johnson

The three main aspects of music are melody, harmony, and rhythm. By the combination and development of each of these, music does its work of shaping the hearts and souls of its listeners. Jazz, a quintessentially American form of music stretches and even transgresses each of these, and in doing so reveals deeper and richer understandings of each. And yet even in transgressing, jazz is deeply grounded in tradition. In this session, we will examine how jazz does its work of transgression while remaining in firm conversation with tradition. This will then be offered as a metaphor for the creative appropriation of the classical tradition that is the task of our contemporary society as we look to the past for inspiration and resources. Additionally, we will explore ways to bring jazz music into the classical classroom.


Winslow Homer, Heroic Vision, and Classical Practice in the Art Classroom

This workshop will explore the work of one of America’s greatest artists, Winslow Homer. We will consider why his art matters for both the classical and American tradition, then spend most of our time in a hands-on exercise on value and composition. Along the way, we will touch on ideas for differentiation across grade levels and reflect on how art and the study of heroic figures can shape our students.


Shaping America’s Civic Imagination with Mark Twain
Bernard Dobski

As one of America’s greatest authors, Mark Twain is known for being many things: a humorist, a social satirist, a teller-of-tall-tales-for-naughty-boys, a metaphysical pessimist, and America’s conscience on race, imperialism, and Gilded Age capitalism, to name just a few. But what all-too-often goes unappreciated about this giant of American literature is the extent to which he intended his fiction to shape our moral and civic imaginations. This was as true when he first burst onto the national scene with “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County” as it was with his last complete novel on Joan of Arc, Personal Recollections. It’s also true across his genres. Whether Twain was writing travelogues, medieval romances, political diatribes, or “morality tales” for young men, whether he employed the short story, long essay, or novel, he was always cultivating an imagination that would prepare his audience to adopt the virtues that the American republic required for its defense, virtues which also form the basis of genuine human flourishing. Twain was able to do this because he was himself shaped by an encounter with the great poet-philosophers of Western civilization, especially Homer, Dante, Shakespeare, and Cervantes. Our workshop will thus look at some of the ways Mark Twain’s outwardly outrageous, patently playful, and sometimes silly fiction performs the serious labor of shaping the imaginations of a citizenry called to preserve ordered liberty under the law. And we will explore ways that Twain can be incorporated into a curriculum whose ultimate goal is to imbue its students with a love of the true, the good, and the beautiful.


The Black Intellectual Tradition in Classical Education
Eric Ashley Hairston

From Phillis Wheatley to W.E.B. DuBois to Toni Morrison and beyond, African American literature and intellectual history have been deeply influenced by the classics. This remarkable relationship directly resulted from both intentional and providential formal and informal education in the classics. Additionally, no study of African American intellectual history is complete without attention to the deep relationship between classical education and African American churches and clergy. From minds introduced to the classics at youth to those exposed to church Sabbath Schools and debating societies to those attending famous African American colleges and universities with deeply classical curricula, generations of African Americans gained part of their cultural crafting and sense of humanity from a classical world far removed from the limitations of antebellum and segregated America. We will explore this tradition and consider what it means to the multiple disciplines it touches.


Revealing the American Soul to American Students: A Workshop on Teaching the Works and Thought of Alexis de Tocqueville to High School Students
Joseph Wysocki

This talk will help high school teachers to help their students access the wisdom of Alexis de Tocqueville. Dr. Wysocki will argue that understanding Tocqueville is crucial for students’ quests for self-knowledge and a great benefit to their future happiness.


A Study of Edmund Burke’s Speech on Conciliation with the Colonies
Vigen Guroian

On March 22, 1775, Edmund Burke, the great British statesman and political philosopher delivered his speech on Conciliation with the Colonies in Parliament. At root the Colonies’ historical grievances were over taxation, with regard to means or fairness and even whether the British Parliament possessed a right to tax the colonies. Thus, the slogan “No taxation without representation.” While Burke’s speech came too late–just a month before the Battle of Lexington and Concord–to prevent the outbreak of war, it has been viewed since that time as a speech of immense political wisdom in which Burke profoundly demonstrates the importance of two fundamental virtues of politics: prudence and magnanimity. Through the nineteenth century and early decades of the last century, Burke’s speech was routinely taught in American schools. We will look at Conciliation with the Colonies as a lesson in politics and history, but also as a lesson in Burkes’ rhetoric which makes it one of the most eloquent speeches of British Parliamentary history. I hope we can have a good conversation.


What Makes a Good Teacher? Virtue and the Art of Teaching
Christopher Perrin, Carrie Eben

Most of us have had at least one good teacher. If we have, we can still remember that teacher, and almost always because that teacher could teach very well and was simply a good and admirable person. In this seminar, we will explore the two ways that good teachers become good: 1) they are models of virtue that inspire students to imitate them, and 2) they are good at the art of teaching or pedagogy. In this seminar, Perrin and Eben will discuss the importance of modeling virtues like zeal for learning, intellectual curiosity, wonder, and humility and how to grow in these virtues; they will also note the key principles of pedagogy contained in their co-authored book, The Good Teacher: Ten Key Pedagogical Principles That Will Transform Your Teaching. And since good teaching has existed throughout history and place, this seminar will note some of the great American teachers from its founding to the present day.


The Trivium: Grammar, Logic, and Rhetoric Across Grades and Disciplines
Jerilyn Olson, Tammy Morrow

Classical Education should always give due honor to the Trivium, yet its application in modern K–12 schools can vary widely. Is the Trivium best understood as a framework for language instruction alone? Should we, following Dorothy Sayers, see it primarily as a model of child developmental stages? Can we view each academic discipline as having its own grammar, logic, and rhetoric? This session will explore these questions and consider practical ways to integrate the Trivium across subjects and grade levels.

EDUCATION ACCESSIBILITY WORKSHOPS:

Seminar—What is a Doxological Classroom?  The Framework and Practice of  Welcoming Exceptional Students (Reading: Disability and Classical Education, Chapter 5—provided by e-mail before conference and printed out for participants)
Amy Richards, Tom Doebler


A Birthright, Not a Privilege
Heather Washburn

Classical education is increasingly reaching every child, affirming that the Great Books and the Great Conversation are the educational birthright of all. Guided by the vision of education as a means of intellectual cultivation for every student, the conviction that the best education should be universally accessible, and the principle that a single rigorous curriculum can unite rather than divide, this talk explores how schools are making Plato, Shakespeare, and Frederick Douglass accessible to all, while preserving the rigor and depth that make classical learning transformative. At once a philosophical celebration of education’s higher purposes and a practical roadmap for educators, the session demonstrates how classical education can serve every child, regardless of background or zip code.


Anna Julia Cooper: The Fulfillment of the Promise
Diana Smith, Angel Adams Parham

Anna Julia Cooper fulfills the remarkable promise of America, a land where a person furthest from opportunity can be a tremendous success. Born into slavery and eventually earning a doctorate at the Sorbonne, Dr. Cooper lived a life committed to the notion that a classical education should be the curriculum for all people. She led a school and a university devoted to her belief in classical education and she proved in her person that to be classically trained is to be free. In this session, participants will learn about Dr. Cooper’s remarkable biography and participate in a seminar focused on one of her educational treatises. Participants will leave with resources for teaching about Dr. Cooper and with an appreciation for the power of classical education to speak to all people at all times.


The Cult of Normalcy and Parents – Finding Partners in our Service to Students with Learning Needs
Tom Doebler

Following a rich discussion of how to create “doxological” classrooms of welcome in the first-ever pre-conference to the National Symposium for Classical Education (please see the symposium website for more information!), Tom will dive deeper into the concept of “the cult of normalcy” that saturates the modern vision of disability. Through a rough historical sketch and discussion, participants will come to understand how our society’s difficulty with human vulnerability paves the way for well-intentioned acts of cruelty. Ultimately, we will establish a connection between our philosophical anthropology and what we value, and consequently what (and more importantly who) we consider to be burdensome. Understanding this concept is at the root of changing our vision for creating schools of welcome, particularly for parents and teachers. As such, participants will also engage in a rich discussion of how to recast a vision of education for members of their community, especially the parents of students with learning needs and differences.


Access to the Canon for Everyone
Toyin Atolagbe, Manjola Koci, Ana Gonzalez

This panel brings together educators and thought leaders from diverse backgrounds to explore the moral and cultural imperative of making the Western Canon accessible to all. Rooted in the transformative tradition of classical education, the conversation will examine how participation in the Great Conversation fosters human flourishing and intellectual dignity. Panelists will reflect on their personal and professional journeys, highlighting how the classical tradition has shaped lives across boundaries of geography, race, and socioeconomic status. Together, they will affirm that the riches of the Canon are not the privilege of a few, but the rightful inheritance of every human soul — and discuss practical pathways for expanding access without compromising rigor or depth.


Taming Dragons: Principles and Practice for De-escalating Intense Emotions
Larry Hampton

This is an experiential session that offers the opportunity to apply principles and practice with a structured format to help students de-escalate when they experience intense emotions like anger. It covers self-preparation, the relationship or language and brain function, five principles of interaction, and a systematic approach to de-escalation.


Multi-Tiered Student Support in Classical Academies: Academic Intervention in Mathematics and Reading
Laurel Fischer

A practical framework for implementing Multi-Tiered System of Supports (MTSS) within classical charter schools will be presented, specifically addressing academic intervention in mathematics and reading. Participants will explore how to maintain the integrity of the classical curriculum while providing targeted support for struggling learners. Drawing from Great Hearts’ comprehensive MTSS Framework implementation, the session covers assessment protocols, intervention strategies, and coordination structures that enable all students to access the rich cream of a classical education. Attendees will leave with actionable strategies for identifying students in need of support, implementing evidence-based interventions, and measuring progress while preserving the distinctive character of classical pedagogy.


Grammar, Rhetoric, and Belonging: A Trivium Approach to Serving English Learners
Gabriela Flatt

Using the Trivium Grammar, Logic, and Rhetoric as a framework to support language acquisition and identity formation.
Key Points:
• Grammar Stage: Building foundational English through memorization, chants, and etymology.
• Logic Stage: Helping ELLs analyze language and arguments through logic puzzles and structured debate.
• Rhetoric Stage: Empowering ELLs to articulate their stories and perspectives through writing and oration.


Latin For the Plebs: Classical Languages and Academic Advantage
Anthony Fredette, Thaddeus Cornell

The session will comprise four major arguments about why Latin is beneficial (and should be a required subject) for all students at classical schools, even those from academically disadvantaged backgrounds: 1) Latin, at most schools, represents for students disadvantaged vis-à-vis English a sort of academic “fresh start;” it is a rare example of a subject after Kindergarten in which students have a new opportunity to be excellent, starting with the fundamentals. 2) Latin continues to afford students a privileged inroad into learning advanced English vocabulary, the knowledge of which is important for reading advanced literature (not to mention college admissions essays, standardized texts, etc.). Crucially, this vocabulary instruction presumes less prior linguistic knowledge and, if taught well, strains the memory less than it would in an English class, in which the concrete, physical etymology of such words is less apparent. 3) Latin also continues to give students a synoptic view of the way in which languages as a whole are structured, and it does so by periodically examining it as a system “from the outside;” because of the fact that it is no student’s native language, and because it is so heavily inflected, it spurs reflection on the deep structures underlying human language as such. 4) At a classical, liberal arts school, Latin provides students with unique access to the rest of the curriculum, familiarizing them with stories encountered in other classes, and giving them the lexical and grammatical toolset which will make their thinking and writing about canonical literature more intellectually rigorous.

PANEL DISCUSSIONS:

The Crisis of Literacy: the Value of an Educated Populace for a Republic
Joshua Katz, Jacob Howland, Kathleen O’Toole

The literacy crisis in the United States is a calamity for a self-governing republic. The purpose of this panel discussion is to engage in a lively exchange about why a republic – perhaps above all other political arrangements – requires a literate, educated citizenry, and what has occurred in American K-12 education and universities to undermine the strong literacy we require. We will trace the classical antecedents of American republicanism and consider why the American founders placed such great value on an educated populace, as a means to assessing how we restore American literacy.


The New School Choice Landscape: How can Charters and Private Schools Innovate, Cooperate, and Thrive in States with ESAs and Vouchers?
Katherine Haley, Raphael Gang, Robert Enlow, Derrell Bradford

This panel will explore the contours of the new choice landscape, and specifically how charter and private school operators can work in mutually beneficial ways to make the most of new private choice funding opportunities. How do ESAs and vouchers create opportunities for new school models, and incentivize innovation within existing school models (e.g., charters)?


Teaching the American Founding in a Classical School
Colleen Sheehan, Zachary German, Andy Smarick

A Classical Education proceeds through the study and Socratic discussion of the best texts and ideas thought by the greatest minds over the centuries and throughout the Western tradition. The premise of this panel is that a classical education should include a deep consideration of the founding principles and documents, speeches, and history that inform the establishment of American republican government. Classical liberal arts students are citizens and the future leaders of American democratic life, and as such, they should come to understand the knowledge of the human condition and the limits of politics the American Founders, the “great oracles of political wisdom,” possessed about how to make a government by the people and for the people succeed.


The Future of Literacy in an AI World
Alex Petkas, John J. Goyette, Erin Valdez

What is the future of literacy in a world where AI tools can be used to produce research, poetry, essays, and other creative work formerly assumed to be solely the domain of humans? This panel will steel-man the case against literacy and challenge the panelists and audience to set aside wishful thinking to explore the most robust and compelling responses to the critics of classical education.


Preaching Beyond the Choir: How Should We Make the Case for Classical Education to the Uninitiated? (This panel is cross-referenced as an Educational Accessibility Workshop)
Steven Wilson, Ian Rowe, Angel Adam Parham

Most (if not all) Symposiasts have a clear notion of classical education and find its virtues to be self-evident. But how should we make classical education legible and attractive to new audiences? How can the virtues of classical education be conveyed to the unversed, the circumspect, even the hostile? And how ought we to do this without undermining, distorting, or dumbing-down its essential elements? What are the biggest misconceptions about classical education? And what are the best ways to defuse them? Our panel of experts will contemplate these questions and more.


Teaching Math Classically: How do Classical School Educators Think it Should be Done and How Can They Actually do it?
Jonathan Gregg, Josh Wilkerson, Sandra Schinetsky, Albert Cheng

What does it mean to teach mathematics classically? This question is often asked by not only math teachers in classical schools but also teachers in other content areas and school leaders. While there is some clarity about how to teach other content areas such as literature, history, and natural philosophy from a distinctively classical approach, there is much less in clarity and consensus when it comes to mathematics. In this workshop, attendees will first learn about the findings from an experiment that identifies what classical school educators think math classrooms should look like and how students themselves describe their math classrooms. Dr. Albert Cheng from the University of Arkansas will moderate the panel discussion about these findings with Dr. Jonathan Gregg of Hillsdale College and Dr. Josh Wilkerson and Sandra Schinetsky, math teachers at the Regents School of Austin and directors of Restoring Mathematics. Attendees will have the opportunity to interact with the panel and consider how to implement with greater fidelity a classical vision of mathematics education in their classrooms. The aim of the workshop is to inspire imagination about what mathematics classrooms can and, perhaps, should look like in classical schools and to equip individuals to take steps to realize such classrooms.


The Place of Civics in a Classical Education
Soren Schwab, Thomas Merrill, Brenda Hafera

In 1796, in his final year as president of the United States, George Washington called on the U.S. Congress to establish a national university, a “primary object” of which, he said, should be “the education of our Youth in the science of Government.” The purpose of this panel is to discuss the place of teaching Civics in a Classical Education. How should it be taught? With what ends in mind?