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ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
The
Classical Liberal Arts Academy is not a tax-funded public school
intended to provide basic workplace skills to millions of children.
We provide rigorous liberal arts instruction, supervision and assessment
to independent students who are piously and diligently seeking Wisdom
through an elite philosophical curriculum.
While we invite all families
to apply for admission and give all families an opportunity to get
started and succeed, we must be straightforward about the challenges
that true classical education poses. Modern schools teach students
that they can be or do anything they desire, but this is not true.
As human beings, we all face real obstacles that, unless overcome, will
keep us from achieving our goals. The pursuit of true wisdom is
one such thing. When a student's life is disordered and
impious, he/she will not progress in the pursuit of wisdom. The
book of Wisdom teaches us:
"Think of the Lord in goodness, and seek him in simplicity of heart:
For he is found by them that tempt him not: and he sheweth himself
to them that have faith in him. For perverse thoughts
separate from God: and his power, when it is tried, reproveth the
unwise: For wisdom will not enter into a malicious soul,
nor dwell in a body subject to sins. For the Holy
Spirit of discipline will flee from the deceitful, and will withdraw
himself from thoughts that are without understanding, and he shall
not abide when iniquity cometh in. For the spirit of
wisdom is benevolent, and will not acquit the evil speaker from his
lips: for God is witness of his reins, and he is a true searcher of
his heart, and a hearer of his tongue.
To succeed in our program, a
student needs all of the following (follow link for details):
1. Catholic Christian Culture
2. Sacramental Graces
3. Parental Discipline
4. Basic Study Skills
1.
Catholic Christian Culture
Non-Catholic families
are welcome to study in the CLAA, let that be clear--and we have a
number of non-Catholic families doing very well. However, it
is a matter of fact that the principles of Protestantism and
Evangelicalism are inconsistent with the principles of true classical
learning. In
other words, there can be no such thing as a "Genuine Protestant
Classical Education". This reality will not be understood until
children enter into Dialectic and Philosophy, but families must be aware
of it at the outset. In American society, religions are treated as
equals by those ignorant of their differences or those concerned only with
the material benefits of religion, but in classical studies the differences become very
clear.
First, Protestant principles
of knowledge, such as "Sola Scriptura", the private interpretation
of Scripture and the
disregard for tradition are contrary to the principles of the art of
Logic and hinder the study of true philosophy, which often depends on
matters of divine revelation that have come outside of Scripture.
For a clear example, the canon of sacred Scripture was established
almost 300 years into Church history--how would this be proven "by the
Bible"? The Bible is itself proven to contain the written word of
God by the living Church, not vice-versa. A student given such a
limited view of truth will have great difficulties on complex
philosophical issues which have developed since the close of biblical
writings and lie beyond the scope
of sacred Scripture. A student in the CLAA will have to abandon Protestant principles in order to
study
philosophy truly.
Second, it must be remembered that the highest
ambition for students
in the classical liberal arts curriculum is religious life, where the
principles of Truth, Goodness and Beauty are most safely and securely
pursued. Students who are raised with no
prospect of religious vocations are forced down paths to which they may
not be called simply because their parents reject other paths for them.
This, of all things, is the greatest danger for non-Catholic students.
In God's will, there is no need to force education to end in
money-making or college admission. History's greatest classically
trained minds have this in common: they found their life's calling in a
spiritual, not material vocation.
Parents should
only enroll a child if they are committed to fully supporting Academy
studies and maintain a culture that is conducive to learning.
Parents cannot enroll their children for rigorous studies that their
home life prevents them from completing. This includes showing
their children necessary love and affection, eliminating avoidable distractions and obstacles,
maintaining a routine or prayer and worship, providing
academic assistance to the student and demonstrating a genuine
appreciation for the student's work. The family must model the
virtues sought through study and gently help the student along.
Families must
also commit to cultivating a spirit of sobriety and maturity among their
children, rather than allowing the perpetual childishness that ruins
American children. The Catholic Church teaches that the age of
reason is normally around 7 years old--not 18, not 22. Children are considered morally accountable by
the age of their first confession and this should be taken seriously.
There is no excuse for inordinate play, entertainment, idleness, etc..
"Youth is the time for extraordinary toil." said the
philosopher Plato--who knew a thing or two about true classical
education.
2.
Sacramental Graces
Christ teaches us
that He is the vine, we are the branches and apart from Him we can do
nothing. This illustration directs Christians to the Sacraments of
the Church, wherein we find all of the blessings our Lord showers down
from heaven upon us: cleansing from original sin, absolution of actual
sin, nourishment for our souls, light for understanding, charity for
family life, authority for ministry and healing for sickness.
Children, from the day of
their birth participate in the reality of these sacraments--earned
and intended for them by Christ--and are drawn to view God as their God
and are regularly strengthened and directed on their way through
childhood and to the end of their lives. Religion is not an adult
activity.
To deny children access to
this life of present, rather than prospective, spiritual life is to
starve a child when he is in most need of food. The Sacraments give children their own sense of God's presence in their life
and unite them to Christians throughout the world, which is a source of
great comfort and confidence that normally holds them fast to Christ
through life. Sunday school and youth group activities are not the
means Christ has established to save our children's souls.
3. Parental Discipline
As God did not intend for children to grow without the graces of the
Church's sacraments, he also did not intend for children to learn
without parental discipline and motivation. We must remember that
the books of Proverbs and Sirach are filled with parental commands for
children to seek wisdom and instruction, but included throughout
these books are exhortations for parents to discipline their children
to promote this.
"He who spoils his son will bind up his wounds, and his feelings
will be troubled at every cry. A horse that is untamed turns out to be stubborn, and a
son unrestrained turns out to be willfull. Pamper a child, and
he will frighten you; play with him, and he will give you grief.
Do not laugh with him, lest you have sorrow with him, and in the end
you will gnash your teeth. Give him no authority in his youth,
and do not ignore his errors. Bow down his neck in his youth,
and beat his sides while he is young, lest he become stubborn and
disobey you, and you have sorrow of soul from him. Discipline
your son and take pains with him, that you may not be offended by
his shamelessness."
Parents must be willing to
create and maintain a system of rewards for their children for good behavior and
of punishments for bad behavior to lead them
along the path to wisdom and goodness.
Those who oppose such
traditional views of parental discipline (and there are some) should
realize that even the laws of the United States leave to parents and
guardians the right to chastise their children. To hold an
opinion, then, that contradicts not only explicit directions of biblical
wisdom literature, but also our own civil laws (which represent the mind
of the majority of men) is to hold an opinion that should be questioned
carefully.
Also,
remember that "positive" methods of teaching, such as those employed by St. John Bosco, were employed with children that
(a) were not his own, (b) were already full of bad habits and (c) were
running wild in the streets. He is not to be used as a
model for parental discipline or homeschooling, as he was serving a very
different group of children than parents are, who receive their children
from birth to be raised in the way of the Lord and kept from developing
bad habits.
4. Basic
Study Skills
The following
skills are expected for students intended to work independently in the CLAA:
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the ability to follow
written instructions
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the ability to
accurately read study materials
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the ability to
communicate with reasonable clarity
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the ability to write
legibly
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the ability
to count, read and write numbers through 100.
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the ability to use a
computer and type with reasonable speed and accuracy
Students who are not yet in
possession of the basic study skills listed above may begin with the
assistance of a parent or older sibling.
Younger students who cannot yet read or write should be placed in the
Petty School, or given basic literacy training before enrolling in the
CLAA.
SUMMARY
The student in whom these
requirements are found will, with God's blessing, fare well in the
Academy. We are not seeking
to exclude any children from receiving a classical liberal arts
education, only to prevent troubles for students
that lack the support needed. The Academy cannot
accept the responsibility of instructing a child whose lack of support,
lack of piety, lack of interest or lack of study skills demand a level
of attention from our support staff that we are simply unable to
provide.
If you have any questions
about our admissions criteria, we are happy to help answer them.
Simply
contact us. |