![]() Most evaluation takes place through written submissions (including papers and short summaries) and tests. Students are also invited to ask their own questions or share observations on the reading. The questions are intended to guide the students into a deeper conversation of the readings and stimulate creative and critical thinking. On teaching: I use a lecture-based format for my literature courses that mixes in questions and conversation with the lecture period. I’m going on faith that they’ll figure out that last one in time, as it has yet to take. Outside of classes about long-deceased authors, you’ll usually find me introducing my four children to some of the other joys in my life: things like baseball, mountains, good stories, the music of the spheres, and sleep. Now my love of Virgil, Augustine, and Dante can be shared across the globe with students just as eager as I was to lay hold of and read the foundational books of western culture. I have been blessed to see the rise of interest in classical schooling go hand in hand with the rise of technology that makes the study of the classics easier and more attainable than ever. My teaching has been both local (including three years at Logos Christian Academy in Fallon, NV and various opportunities with homeschoolers both there and in my current residence of Moscow, ID) and online for nearly a decade. I have since taught a variety of classes at the junior high and high school level, including History, Literature, and Latin. ![]() ![]() Andrews College (class of ‘05), but my roots in classical education go back to high school and some of the first online classics-based tutorials with Wes Callihan and Fritz Hinrichs. ![]()
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