Featured
School
The Lyceum
Since
2003, a select group of Catholic junior and senior high school students
have enjoyed the privilege of spending their days in a charming and
historic brick structure in Cleveland's Little Italy neighborhood. The
building, a little gem on the corner of Murray Hill and Paul Roads,
is an old church called "Chiesa Giovanni." Offering flexible
classroom and office space, a kitchen and several corners for quiet
study, the building has a gracious lofted center hall, "The Giovanni,”
which has a wonderful acoustic for concerts and plays, and is an ideal
setting for seminar discussions.
This distinctive atmosphere of beauty houses The Lyceum, a 7-12 Catholic
classical school with a Great Books curriculum and an institutional
commitment to Socratic discussion classes. The Lyceum aims to
have graduates who, having been formed by Catholic western civilization,
then become bearers and guardians of a culture of life.
Headmaster Mark Langley believes that the way in which subjects are
learned is crucial for achieving the perfection of a student’s mind.
This is why The Lyceum has adopted the "Socratic seminar" method
for most of its classes. To a great extent, students read works
written by the greatest authors, such as Homer, Thucydides, and St.
Augustine, who teach both by content and example. Sitting around tables
rather than at desks, students are encouraged to take part in class
discussions. In this way, students at The Lyceum learn to think for
themselves and to adopt the tools of learning that will last them throughout
their lives. Lyceum graduates enter college with minds already provoked
by the seminal ideas of great thinkers, ready to articulate and defend
the reasons for their own intellectual positions.
Mr. Langley offers American History as an example. Texts are
taken from Mortimer Adler’s collection, The Annals of America. Students
discuss the writings and speeches of Columbus, Otis and Burke, Adams
and Jefferson, DeToqueville, Lincoln, Calhoun and Clay. “Asking
provocative questions is important for successful discussions; sometimes
they need to be shocked into speaking,” said Mr. Langley. “I
try to figure out what the students will naturally think and then often
I’ll argue for the other side. For instance, the students immediately
wanted to nail Benjamin Franklin for his heterodox religious views
as expressed in what Adler calls Franklin’s Credo. So I defended
him. It got them to look more closely at what he was saying,
and find deeper ways to criticize him.”
Lyceum teachers spend a good deal of time reading aloud to students.
Listening helps students understand the sometimes difficult texts.
As teachers read, questions and problems naturally arise that begin
discussions. Mr. Langley believes this is a great way for teachers
not used to discussion classes to begin to get a feel for it. “Teachers
who have never experienced discussion classes as students feel uncomfortable.
They don’t have the sense of control that lecturing brings with it.
Sitting around a table with students instead of in front of them also
takes some getting used to. But it’s important that students learn
to talk to one another instead of looking to the teacher as the Answer
Man. And teachers need to see wondering, debating students as a good
thing.” In Mr. Langley’s opinion, more experienced teachers have a
greater difficulty adjusting. Surprisingly, retired persons turning
to teaching as a second career seem a more natural fit. Common faculty
discussions of original works and great ideas helps develop a sense
of how they can work.
The science and math courses are not all Socratic, relying on traditional
textbook formats. Mr. Langley encourages teachers to supplement
using original authors such as William Harvey, John Dalton, J. Henri
Fabre and Konrad Lorentz. He believes that textbooks tend to
make math and science into “mind-numbing, indoctrination sessions.
Only in Euclid can you get serious discussions going among students;
this is their greatest experience of really thinking in a math class.
Textbooks make so many claims that students and teachers cannot hope
to explore effectively. In contrast, original authors were so wise,
they have so much to teach, that you can ask provocative questions
with real hope of a successful discussion.”
At the Lyceum, liberal education is understood as that education in which
students are challenged with all that is best in the history of human
thought. By reading the original works of the greatest thinkers, participating
in the greatest art and music, and living a life which is informed by
the Catholic faith, Lyceum students assimilate and perpetuate the civilization
of truth and love.
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