As I mentioned in my last education post, I have a stack of books in front of me that have informed and are informing my educational philosophy, particularly as I plan for this coming year. I will be sharing several quotes and important concepts from each in the next few posts, but I want to start with Awakening Wonder: A Classical Guide to Truth, Goodness & Beauty. This is a dense book that was difficult for me to read and understand, but it contains beautiful truths that are vital in our lives. I will need to read it several more times through in order to grasp most of them. For now this summary quote is greatly impacting my contemplation of my role as a teacher in the lives of my children:
Thus, we must ask ourselves: Are we presenting music and mathematics, Beauty and symmetry, as inseparable? Do we teach our students to see athletic skill as an embodiment of control over chaos and thus exemplative of the processes of creation? Do our science classes teach that discovery of the workings of the world not only gives us knowledge but awakens us to the awe and wonder of the Incarnation itself? Do our history classes present the totality of history as an eschatological narrative from Garden to city, from creation to communion, from water to wine? Do our Bible classes present theology as rooted in philokalia, the love of Beauty? Do we teach our students that there is something extraordinary about the imagio Dei, that we yearn for a meaning and a purpose outside of ourselves, that we long for a Beauty that awakens us from our self-centered slumbers, that our hearts ache for a life filled with wonder and awe? Are we cultivating an insatiable desire in our students to encounter the True, the Good, and the Beautiful in a life-transforming way, a way that enables our souls to reach for and embrace a state of being than which none greater can possibly be thought?
Excellent!
ReplyDeleteI also wanted to say, Heidi...I finished reading Deconstructing Penguins the other day. I believe I got the recommendation from your recent podcast? Previously, I have enjoyed perusing your Book Detectives posts but now I am super excited to go through them with a more thorough understanding of what they are about. It was a great book and I can't wait to go through your posts on the subject!
Thanks for another introduction to something great!
Heidi,
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to your discussion/insights/writings on this topic.
(Btw, I think you have a typo in your quotation. Shouldn't it be "imago Dei"?)
Glad to hear that, Rebecca!
ReplyDeleteMrs. Hart~ In the book it says "imagio Dei." I double checked because I've only seen it as "imago Dei," but I was questioning my intelligence and didn't want to correct it. :D It probably is a typo, though.