Episodios

  • Ask Art #6 — A Classical Education Perspective on Charlotte Mason
    Mar 11 2025

    In December and January, the Classical Et Cetera podcast of Memoria Press released a three-part series entitled “Charlotte Mason Explained: A Classical Education Perspective.” These recorded conversations between four classical education experts provoked much reaction and discussion within the Charlotte Mason community. Although opinions vary, I think there is one thing we can all agree …

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    1 h y 59 m
  • Things New and Old
    Mar 4 2025

    Editor’s Note, by Art Middlekauff Claude Jenkins (1877–1959) was a Church of England clergyman and historian. He was Lambeth Librarian from 1910 to 1952 and taught Ecclesiastical History at King’s College in London.[1] An avid collector of books, he was said to have acquired 30,000 by the end of his life.[2] Known for his eccentricities …

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    14 m
  • A Note on the Teaching of School Science
    Feb 25 2025

    Editor’s Note, by Dawn Rhymer “There is, at the present time, a broad distinction made between science and the humanities.” — Dr. Telford Petrie, 1928 I smiled, as in reading the words of Dr. Petrie, I recognized a friend. Almost a century after Dr. Petrie published his ideas, I heard author and speaker Dr. Jonathan …

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    9 m
  • Imagination as a Powerful Factor in a Well-Balanced Mind
    Feb 18 2025

    Editor’s Note: Ellen Parish delivered this address at the PNEU Conference of 1914. At the time, she was the General Organizing Secretary of the PNEU. For more information about Ellen Parish, see last week’s article. By E. A. Parish The Parents’ Review, 1914, pp. 379-390[1] Mrs. Gray has made us all feel the great need …

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    30 m
  • The Teaching of History to Young Children
    Feb 11 2025

    Editor’s Note, by Art Middlekauff Ellen Alice Parish (1869–1947) “devoted 34 years of her active life to forwarding the work of Charlotte M. Mason.” The Parents’ Review in 1947 summarized her legacy: She was trained by [Mason] at the Home of Education, Ambleside. Afterwards she became General and Organizing Secretary of the P.N.E.U. in London, …

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    18 m
  • Should Children Reason?
    Feb 4 2025

    Editor’s Note, by Art Middlekauff Barbara Webber was born in 1893 near London, and at age 17 her skill as a writer became known when her first short stories were published. She then married George Hodges and they had three children.[1] For some time she home educated her children using the Charlotte Mason method, and …

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    23 m
  • The Brontës
    Jan 28 2025

    Editor’s Note by Richele Baburina Scale How Evenings or Scale How Tuesdays were devised by Charlotte Mason for her teaching students at the House of Education to “amuse and edify one another” by having them choose a “favourite author, musician, or artist, with one member giving a sketch of the life and the others supplying …

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    46 m
  • The Cure of a Mental Habit
    Jan 21 2025

    Editor’s Note, by Art Middlekauff The opening article of the eleventh issue of The Parents’ Review was entitled “Dorothy Elmore’s Achievement: A Forecast of the New Education, By the Editor.” Divided into five chapters and published in January 1891, it spanned 19 pages of Charlotte Mason’s fledgling periodical. An early reader was struck by this …

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    10 m