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HeightsCast: Forming Men Fully Alive

Welcome to HeightsCast, the official podcast of The Heights School. Every week, we feature interviews with teachers, educators, and experts in a variety of fields, both here at The Heights School and beyond our school's walls. Our conversations concern the education and formation of men fully alive in the liberal arts tradition. In other words, we talk about the education of the kind of man you’d want your daughter to marry. We hope that these conversations may be both delightful and insightful; and that through them, your vocation as educators may be ever renewed. Join us!
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HeightsCast: Forming Men Fully Alive
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Now displaying: December, 2021
Dec 17, 2021

This week, we sit down with Dr. Lionel Yaceczko to discuss his new book on the fourth century Roman grammarian, Ausonius of Bordeaux.  In looking at his life, we dive deeper into various aspects of classical education.  As Ausonius lived through an important period of religious, political, and cultural change, considering his life also affords us the opportunity to think about how the advent of Christianity affected (and continues to affect) classical education.  

With Christmas fast approaching, perhaps this discussion may serve to remind us that teaching is pointing and that its ultimate purpose is to point us to the Teacher.  

Show Highlights 

  • Who is Ausonius and why should educators study him? 
  • The life and times of a Roman teacher, beaurocrat, and Christian convert 
  • What Ausonius’s life can teach about classical education 
  • What is a Quaestor
  • What is a grammaticus? A rhetor?
  • Education in Late Antiquity 
  • The most egalitarian form of elitism? How the liberal arts can liberate 
  • The importance of memorization in education 
  • How the advent of Christianity changed classical education 
  • A new canon for education: introducing Sacred Scripture to the liberal arts 
  • May I be so bold? Rhetoric and persuasion in Late Antiquity
  • What is a litterator? On the stages of education before the grammaticus: Abecedarium, elementa, and the road to the masterpieces
  • On the importance of study for teachers, and teaching for researchers 
  • Augustine and the vir perfectus as vir sapiens in the service of the Word
  • From philologoi to theologoi: how Revelation changes everything

Suggested Reading 

Ausonius Grammaticus: The Christening of Philology in the Late Roman West by Lionel Yaceczko 

Power and Persuasion in Late Antiquity: Towards a Christian Empire by Peter Brown

The World of Late Antiquity by Peter Brown

The Regensburg Address by Pope Benedict XVI

Also on the Forum

Defining the Liberal Arts 

What’s in a Name? Shedding Light on the Dark Ages

History the Way it Was… and the Way It Should Be

Dec 1, 2021

Continuing with the theme of mentoring, this week Mr. David Maxham discusses how we, as parents and teachers, can better mentor struggling students by taking a step back and focusing on the basics. He offers three practical guideposts for these wonderful guys to strive for as they take steps toward becoming the man they were made to be. We remain, as always, optimistic.

After establishing a relationship of trust with your mentees, Mr. Maxham recommends helping our boys structure their days around the following three key moments: 

  1. Waking up in the morning 
  2. Midday break 
  3. Going to sleep at night 

Anchoring resolutions to these three moments, Mr. Maxham explains, helps the boys to achieve their goals. As half the battle in achieving a goal lies in being mindful of it, attaching them to parts of the day that occur without fail can be a strategy for success.  

A good place to start when building the foundation could be: a morning offering after waking up, a brief moment of recollection at midday, and an examination of conscience before going to bed at night. As the boys develop more goals, having this framework in place will be a helpful support. 

Moreover, as parents, we can help our sons develop these habits by practicing them both ourselves and together as a family. A quick morning offering at breakfast or a brief moment of family prayer in the evening are excellent ideas. And asking our children to pray for us is a great way to not only help them pray, but also to help each of us, who, as we all know, need all the grace we can get. Although there are many things that a six year old boy may not be able to help his parents with, he can pray for them; and that is worth the whole world. 

Show Highlights

  • Where to begin with a mentee who is struggling 
  • The dangers of overwhelming mentees with too much 
  • How to help your mentee develop goals 
  • The importance of framing questions with the right language 
  • How you son can put a structure in place to get to the root of problems
  • Why parents and educators need to have long-term vision
  • Habits are not things that you just turn on and off
  • Keep it simple: the three key moments in the day and how to anchor resolutions to them
  • How many goals should a mentee work on at once?
  • How parents can coach their sons in the foundations 
  • Ask your children to pray for you 

Also on The Forum

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