Augustine of Hippo

"A Christian is a person who thinks in believing and believes in thinking... Pagan learning is not entirely made up of false teachings and superstitions. It contains also some excellent teachings, well suited to be used by truth. These are, so to speak, their gold and their silver, which they did not invent themselves, but which they dug out of the mines of the providence of God, which are scattered throughout the world."
fr. On Christian Doctrine
St. Augustine, Bishop of Hippo

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Three Schools in One
Following the centuries old concept of the Trivium, New Covenant Schools consists of a Grammar School, a School of Dialectic, and a School of Rhetoric. Each of these schools approximates the elementary, middle and high school years that are more familiar, but there are significant differences. We employ pedagogical methods, and we include content informed by a classical curriculum, drawing upon the collective wisdom of ancient cultures, the middle ages, and contemporary research. Our goal extends beyond teaching children what to know, but emphasizes how to think. Click here to read our Academic Profile.

Our teachers are trained in specific skills and content and apply distinctive teaching methods in their classes. The Grammar School, grades k-6, employs memorization, singing and chant, as well as a variety of multi-sensory approaches to reading and arithmetic. We employ contemporary curriculums that best comport with our basic philosophy, including Saxon Mathematics, Shurley Grammar, Spalding Phonics & Language, Excellence in Writing, Sattler Latin, and The History of the World, a time-line developed by New Covenant Schools.

In grades 7-9, known as dialectic, students are introduced to logic, in addition to their more familiar courses in math, English and history. We employ a more Socratic teaching method that involves question and answers, class debate, and a classroom environment that fosters discussion and inquiry, with an emphasis upon reason and analysis.

In grades 10-12, the rhetoric level, we teach classical rhetoric, and emphasize the "great books" including the Bible, Homer, Aristotle, Virgil, St. Agustine, and Shakespeare, just to name a few. Students at all levels study the classical languages of Latin and Greek, and read selected works in those languages by the time they reach the junior year. During the senior year students will also research, write, and orally present and defend to the faculty a significant thesis of a controversial nature.

Above all, New Covenant cultivates a Christian atmosphere for learning in the conviction that education is as much a matter of the heart as it is the head. Christian character and values are of supreme importance because the fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge.

Many educators recognize that Dorothy L. Sayers' essay, entitled "The Lost Tools of Learning," has provided impetus for the revival of classical education. First delivered as a speech at Oxford in 1947, this essay is a compelling call for a return to the enduring approach and values that a classical education provides. While it is by no means the first word - or the last - New Covenant Schools has constructed its curriculum using it as a framework for guidance on broad points. An abbreviated version of the essay can be downloaded (pdf) by clicking here.


Extracts from
The Lost Tools of Learning
by Dorothy L. Sayers


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Revised: 02.06.07