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What is Classical Education?
The purpose
of a classical education is to train young people to think
and to be good. Classical education began in Greece and Rome,
revived during the Renaissance, and was alive and well when
our Founding Fathers went to school. Classical education all
but died out over the course of the twentieth century as so-called
progressive educators dumbed down curricula and replaced solid
programs with fads such as "whole language" and
"new math." In the twenty-first century, classical
education is making a huge comeback, as seen in the growth
of Latin programs around the country.
Ridgeview
is one of the leading classical schools in the state and the
nation. Last year, Ridgeview's high school was ranked the
number one public high school in the state according to the
Colorado School Accountability Report (SAR). The school has
topped the CSAP charts, been named one of the best 100 charter
schools in the nation by the Center for Education Reform,
been recognized by the U. S. Department of Education, and
been featured in The Washington Times. Ridgeview's success
is easy to explain. We do not underestimate what students
can learn. We believe that young people are naturally curious
and, given the right teachers and the right books, will learn
how to think and learn how to be good. Why expect anything
less from your child's education?
Dr. T. O. Moore, Principal
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