-
Recovering the Lost Tools of Learning (Turning Point Christian Worldview Series) (Paperback)
$11.43 - Save $5.56 32% off - RRP $16.99 Free shipping worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 24 hours | |Short Description for Recovering the Lost Tools of LearningDouglas Wilson, director of the renowned Logos School, puts forth his ideas for the restoration in the curriculum of "Christian humanism"--as contrasted with what Christopher Dawson has called "secular humanism.
Full description- Publisher: Titles distributed by Christian Art Distributors
- Published: 06 May 1994
- Format: Paperback 215 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Religious & Spiritual Fiction | Philosophy & Theory Of Education | Teaching Of A Specific Subject | Christianity | Christian Instruction
- ISBN 13: 9780891075837 ISBN 10: 0891075836
- Sales rank: 302,412
Other books
Full description for Recovering the Lost Tools of Learning
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 foundation of someone's worldview. Education deals with fundamental questions that require religious 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. "Good at diagnosing our educational afflictions, Douglas Wilson is still better at finding remedies. His Logos School provides a model, a practical design, for the restoration in the curriculum of Christian humanism--as contrasted with what Christopher Dawson called secular humanism." --Russell Kirk, D. Litt., editor, The University Bookman

