GCU online education innovators led 25-year push

GCU online education innovators led 25-year push

GCU online education innovators led 25-year push

Computers looked like this, with a monochrome screen, when GCU’s leaders got involved in the online education movement.

Editor’s note: This story is reprinted from the February 2022 issue of GCU Magazine. To read the digital version of the magazine, click here.

By Rick Vacek
GCU Magazine

It all began with fax machines and 25 dial-in modems, routed through a server in San Francisco called ALEC.

Fax machines like this one were used to transmit assignments when online education first began.

University of Phoenix online students in the late 1990s would fax their work to instructors, who would grade it and send it back. Before they could learn the course material, students first had to learn how to navigate news groups, accessed through those modems. Instructors could attach a hyperlink to what they shared, but images and videos weren’t yet in the online education picture.

“You look back on it and you think, ‘Well, that’s primitive,’” said Mark Alexander, Grand Canyon Education’s Senior Vice President of Curriculum and Publishing. “Well, yeah, it was – it was primitive. It was early days. But it worked really well. It was very simple. They kept it very simple and tried to minimize technology problems as much as they could.”

Alexander is one of the many higher education pioneers who followed Brian Mueller from the University of Phoenix when he became Grand Canyon University president in 2008, determined to take online education to even greater heights. To understand how they have turned GCU into a leader in the field, you need to go back to the beginnings 25 years ago.

The timeline below contains the key markers, but the story is best told by the key catalysts, Alexander among them. And the obvious place to start is with the man who has shepherded all this innovation.

THE BIG PICTURE:

Defying the disbelievers

Mueller gets a twinkle in his eye when he talks about any of GCU’s advancements since he arrived in 2008. But online education is one of the biggest bright spots:

“There were a couple things that were interesting about it. One was how strongly we believed in it. We thought we could reach people across the world with innovative ways to deliver education, which could help them move their careers forward.

“And the other thing was how strongly we were criticized by the traditional academic community for delivering education in an online modality. As much as we believed in what we were doing and where it was going, it was received equally poorly on the other side of it.

GCU President Brian Mueller and his team kept pushing online education forward despite criticism from the traditional academic community.

“But we just kept pushing forward. I remember the level of cooperation that existed between our technology people, our faculty people, our curriculum people, our service people and how we just continued to work together.

“It wasn’t just about the learning. What we realized was that we had to create a learning management platform so faculty and students could come together around good curriculum, but we had to surround it with technology that could provide an equal amount of services.

“We weren’t going to treat those students any differently than a student who would come on campus. So there were writing labs and math labs and there were tutorials created and there was a large electronic library that was created.”

But those innovations wouldn’t have been nearly as effective without what Mueller calls “the single best decision we made” – maintaining small, intimate classrooms. GCU online instructors don’t have hundreds of students who just take multiple-choice exams. The interaction in their manageable groups is far more thought-provoking.

“The ironic thing was, the internet is just a communication tool,” Mueller said. “It’s the greatest communication tool, probably, that has ever been created. Education is a lot about communication, and we fostered the communication in that environment to the extent that faculty members would get to know students very well, students would get to know each other very well, and we would have vibrant discussions.

“As a teacher, when I walk into a classroom, I can do what I can do in an hour or two-hour class session from a discussion perspective. But when that discussion goes from Monday to Sunday night, the depth that you can create in that discussion, the great ideas that you can create, are far greater than you can even do in a physical, brick-and-mortar classroom.”

THE FACULTY:

New way to hire in higher education

More discussions mean the need for a lot more faculty, both fulltime and part-timers known as adjuncts. The revolution in hiring has been led by Kelly Palese, GCE’s Senior Vice President for Faculty Operations:

Kelly Palese has watched online education faculty hiring change dramatically.

“Online teaching has become a standard, acceptable way to be involved in higher ed and be able to keep your fulltime job and keep your life the way you have it. Online adjunct teaching has become a sought-after, part-time profession for people.

“Back in the day, you would hear the term ‘professional online adjunct’ and they would adjunct for 10 different schools and try to cobble together a living doing it. But what you really see a lot of now is it is almost a part-time profession or part-time career for people who have zero interest in teaching full-time. They need to keep their full-time jobs, but they are incredibly passionate about the adjunct teaching that they do online.

“What that has done is bring a lot of people into this new adjunct profession, and we’re no longer having to cast this wide net for recruiting purposes because people come to us. They want to give back, they want to share their passion for their discipline, and they choose GCU because they want to do it from a Christ-centered perspective.”

The creation of the Online Full- Time Faculty, bringing them together into the same building, is one of GCU’s two big online education developments, in Palese’s view. The other is the collaboration between Academic Affairs and Student Services.

“Now students are having arms wrapped around them by both faculty and their counselor,” she said.

THE TECHNOLOGY:

From Angel to LoudCloud to Halo

All this wouldn’t have been possible, of course, without continuing innovations in technology, and that’s where Joe Mildenhall, GCU’s former longtime Chief Information Officer, comes in. He was given 90 days in 1998 to expand University of Phoenix’s bulletin board system beyond the maximum of 3,000 users, “and I’ve been on the ride ever since.” Within two years, it had exceeded 50,000:

Joe Mildenhall had to deal with the challenges of getting the technology to work effectively.

“They had news group forums, which were threaded, discussion-based forums. A lot of the early bulletin board forums used that for their conversation model. Our first task was moving that class implementation to a better platform that was able to handle a lot more students. But we still relied on that news group-based platform.

“With news groups you had different folders. They would have a folder for general classroom discussion. One for instructor questions. One for assignment submission. Students had rights capability into that folder – they couldn’t look at each other’s assignments.

“We used that for several years. It worked well because it was functional. The other piece of it was that we changed the communication so instead of having the 25 dial-in modems, we actually had them communicating with that classroom through the internet.

“Our students initially were on dialup connections. You didn’t have internet connections through your cable company then. You had dial-up, with all the modem connections. It was fun times.”

Mildenhall has been a key mover in GCU’s graduation in learning management systems, from Angel to LoudCloud to the newest iteration, Halo, which was launched this academic year. The University’s online expertise became even more valuable when the pandemic began in 2019 – the LMS already was a familiar tool for traditional students.

“It really laid the foundation for how quickly we were able to respond to COVID,” he said. “If we would have been disorganized, we would have been in the same boat as most institutions, scrambling to get something built.

“As it was, all the students already had an online classroom. The instructors had integrated it into their teaching of the class. And they just had to be told, ‘OK, it’s all going to be there. You already know where ‘there’ is.’”

THE INSTRUCTION:

Sophistication enters the equation

Alexander began teaching online for University of Phoenix in 2001. Ironically, his family moved frequently when he was a child as his father, Don, taught while earning graduate degrees. Now, Mark was allowed to stay in one place and teach, but he had a lot to learn at first – and so did the students:

Mark Alexander’s online education began as a teacher.

“When you first go online, it’s like, ‘Wait, where is everything? How do I do this?’ That was such a critical aspect of it – those counselors helping the students those first times, getting them into class, walking them to class, showing them around. Tech support was critical to those folks, too, because the system wasn’t as holistic and contained as it is now.

“It was very workplace relevant. It attracted people who had maybe started college before and had some number of credits and were needing to come back and finish for whatever reason.

“The biggest piece of the model was that it was practitioner faculty. The person who was teaching was a person like yourself. In a marketing class, we’re not just going to talk about a strategic marketing plan. We’re actually going to have you write one and build one, based on your experience in your company.”

Since coming to GCU, Alexander has played a key role in the conversion to electronic textbooks and in constructing curriculum that is applicable for ground and online students. He has seen it all when it comes to online education. What one word encapsulates it all?

“Sophisticated comes to mind. We’re far more sophisticated today in the way technology is structured and the way we use technology and the way we leverage that. We’re certainly more scalable. More people are doing online learning than they ever thought would be possible.”

Palese came up with the same word for the faculty part of the equation:

“Everything around the faculty process and the faculty experience in the online classroom has just become that much more sophisticated. Recruiting is much more disciplines focused. The ways, the methods, the strategies that faculty use are much more sophisticated.”

And yet Mueller makes it sound so simple, this idea of bringing working adults back to school to create problem solvers:

“We took the learning model that worked in the physical, brick-and-mortar classroom, and we just replicated it online. Rather than bring faculty members and students around great curriculum to a physical, brick-andmortar building, we brought them to the online learning environment.”

And then just kept innovating … for 25 years that changed higher education forever.

Contact Rick Vacek at (602) 639-8203 or [email protected].

****

TECHNOLOGY TIMELINE

University of Phoenix

Late 1990s

ALEC accessed via 25 dial-in modems. Limit: 3,000 students.

Early 1999

Online learning system (OLS) launches. Code name: Groundhog. Target capacity: 20,000 students.

2001

OLS 2001 launches. Target capacity: 100,000 students.

2002

Launches rEsource for online delivery of course materials and electronic textbooks

2005

OLS 3 pushes number of students supported to more than 250,000. Eliminates need to use Outlook Express.

GCU

2009

Angel learning management system (LMS) in use

2011

LoudCloud begins supporting online students

2013

Traditional students added to LoudCloud

2021

Production rollout of Halo

****

Related content:

GCU Today: No Hal-lucination: GCU switches to its own LMS

GCU Magazine: Even online, ground students feel touch of class

GCU Today: Faculty are plugged in for online, blended learning

 

Teaching children skills in STEM, Code Ninjas offers unique learning center for kids

Teaching children skills in STEM, Code Ninjas offers unique learning center for kids

PITTSFORD, N.Y. (WROC) — The words, “video games” could possibly be just plenty of to get youngsters to prevent and listen. Although typically movie online games and education aren’t found paired collectively, a area finding out center is searching to alter that.

The entrepreneurs of Code Ninjas, a understanding centre in Pittsford, know that video online games are not only entertaining, but they can also be educational. The center teaches youngsters personal computer coding and issue-fixing expertise when having entertaining setting up video online games.

Anything about Code Ninjas is built around enjoyment, which keeps youngsters coming back again. But the center also delivers the final results that parents are searching for, as their children acquire coding and challenge-resolving capabilities they’ll require for work in the long term.

The software capabilities a sturdy, activity-centered curriculum created up of nine belts, just like martial arts. The curriculum is self-paced, but not self-taught kids get quick help and encouragement from Code Sensei’s and fellow learners as they progress from white to black belt.

The software keeps young ones enthusiastic with minor wins along the way, and “Belt-Up” celebrations where by they receive color-coded wristbands to mark their graduation to the upcoming level. By the time a baby finishes the method, they will have a accomplished app sport that they coded from scratch.

After two a long time of growth at their spot on Monroe Avenue, Code Ninjas will have a sister heart opening on Prolonged Pond Street in Greece in the subsequent several months. The Greece heart will supply the similar schooling software as Pittsford, and will also present a total line up of weekly STEM and pc-concentrated summer months camps from June by August.

“They generate video game titles for the most section, so what kid doesn’t enjoy actively playing online games, so we made a decision, you know, here at Code Ninjas to switch that passive display screen time into a thing in which they are actively employing their brains.” Location Director of Code Ninja Pittsford and Greece, Christy Mills reported.

“Code Ninjas is unlike any other tutoring plan. It offers kids an opportunity to undertaking into coding, over and above their current university classes, in a fun and inviting, karate-themed match natural environment. Not only are they getting publicity to engineering to assistance their long term, but they are also honing conversation and social abilities with their fellow ninjas. It’s so considerably enjoyment, young children do not understand they`re mastering,” co-proprietor Carolyn Cossavella claimed.

Code Ninjas provides a range of prospects for small children to get associated, together with a flexible weeknight coding education and learning application, summer camps, birthday functions, and Parents Evening Out functions on weekends.

Registration is now open up for the summer months camps at the Greece locale and the to start with family members to enroll at Code Ninjas Greece will get unique discounted rates.

For far more facts about the new Code Ninjas Greece place, please pay a visit to their web site or simply call 585-900-2633.

Frias Named Houston Head Coach

Frias Named Houston Head Coach

HOUSTON – Jaime Frias has been named Houston Soccer head coach, Vice President for Athletics Chris Pezman introduced Wednesday.
 
Frias comes at Houston from Virginia in which he served as an assistant coach due to the fact Jan. 2019. Through two stints at UVA, Frias served the Cavaliers to 4 ACC titles (2012, 2013, 2015, 2021) and a few Faculty Cups (2013, 2014, 2020).
 
“We’re really thrilled to announce the employing of Jaime Frias and welcome he and his household to Houston,” Pezman said. “His file of good results at exceptionally superior degrees is a product for what we are hoping to develop at Houston. Jaime’s leadership and ongoing ascension positions our method favorably as we enter an fascinating upcoming.” 
 
Prior to his next stint at the University of Virginia Frias labored exclusively with the United States Soccer Federation.  He served as head mentor of the U18 Women’s Nationwide Crew and assistant coach with the U20 Women’s National Team from April of 2017 by way of January of 2019.  He was the head coach of the U16 Youth National group prior to assuming his obligations with the U18 and U20 teams. In addition to his national workforce head coach practical experience, Jaime participated in three U20 Earth Cups including the Below 20 World Cup Championship in 2012.
 
Houston Soccer Head Coach Jaime Frias:
“I would like to thank Chris Pezman, DeJuena Chizer and the relaxation of the using the services of committee for entrusting me to be the up coming women’s soccer coach at the University of Houston.  Coming dwelling to mentor in the city I grew up in and a spot I have constantly regarded as home was an prospect I could not move up and a desire appear legitimate for me. 
 
I would also like to thank Steve Swanson and the whole University of Virginia women’s soccer personnel for their friendship and mentorship all over my time there.  Steve in individual has been a massive impact on my vocation and private lifestyle and I value all the assist he’s demonstrated me these previous 12 decades.
 
I now have the privilege to go on my coaching journey at an establishment that values athletic and educational achievement. There is an exhilaration all over the University of Houston which is apparent by the present nationally regarded tutorial departments and sporting activities groups on campus. Our mission will be to set a regular of excellence that is aligned with the mission and eyesight of the University.  There is no better time to be a Cougar than now!”
 
The Frias File
Frias served as head coach at the College of Nevada for the 2008-09 seasons, foremost the software to the finals of the 2009 WAC Event and the most convention wins in college history.
 
He also invested 3 seasons as head mentor at Stephen F. Austin (2005-2007) together with currently being named the 2005 Southland Meeting Coach of the Year. In six whole seasons with the Lumberjacks, including a few as an assistant, the plan won four Southland Meeting titles and sophisticated to two NCAA Tournaments. 
 
Frias earned his Bachelor of Science in Overall health and Physical Instruction from the Centenary College of Louisiana where by he played soccer four seasons and was a two-time workforce captain. Centenary was also the very first halt on his coaching occupation, serving as an assistant mentor from 2000-02.
 
He and his spouse, Ta, have two children, Azari, and Jaime Dhani.
 
Frias inherits a program fresh off its most successful year of application background. In 2021, the Cougars set a new plan record for wins with 13. For the very first time in method heritage, Houston Soccer completed the standard period with a No. 2 convention ranking and semifinals berth in the American Athletic Meeting Tournament.
 
Stay Linked
Stick to Houston Soccer on Twitter and Instagram at @UHCougarSoccer, and “Like” UHCougarSoccer on Facebook.
  
Join THE COUGAR RESERVES
Admirers can help assist the Houston Soccer method by joining the Cougar Reserves. To discover out more facts about the Cougar Reserves Club, click listed here or connect with Cougar Satisfaction at (713) 743-GoUH (713-742-4684).

Saugerties School District discusses how the elementary school attendance zones will be redrawn

Saugerties School District discusses how the elementary school attendance zones will be redrawn

The Saugerties Central Faculty District’s (SCSD) attempts to reimagine education for all college students is remaining partly served by the impending closure of Mt. Marion Elementary College at the conclude of the 2021-22 school yr. In which people learners will wind up attending college is nonetheless remaining worked out. 

SCSD Superintendent Kirk Reinhardt up to date some of the plans for the 2022-23 school 12 months during a presentation at a conference of the Board of Training held on Tuesday, February 8. Reinhardt stated the question he’s most being requested by mom and dad is how will elementary college attendance zones be redrawn, and how shortly will they be announced? 

“Our transportation department, our business enterprise department and our exclusive training department are putting all of that collectively,” Reinhardt reported. “And we’re hoping within just the up coming number of weeks to set out people lines to our moms and dads so they know as before long as doable, uh, particularly the types that were actual near on the edge.”

Some transportation and college working day facts has presently been established by the district. The tutorial day at the Jr./Sr. Superior Faculty will operate from 7:45 a.m. right until 2:18 p.m., with early morning university bus drop off at 7:25 a.m.

Of the district’s three remaining elementary faculties — Lawrence M. Cahill, Grant D. Morse and Charles M. Riccardi — two will operate from 8:45 a.m. through 2:58 p.m., and the other from 9:15 a.m. until 3:28 p.m.. College bus drop off will be 8:25 a.m. and 8:55 a.m. respectively. Which of the elementary educational institutions will be in which timeframe will in portion be identified by bus routes, like a motivation to hold as many distinctive training pupils in their household schools as doable, as effectively as retaining after-university applications throughout the district. The target, Reinhardt reported, is to announce attendance boundaries by April or May perhaps. 

In an job interview 3 times following the college board conference, Reinhardt claimed the district is also searching into enrichment systems and other academic alternatives for all quality amounts, together with elementary schools.   

“One of our district ambitions is for all learners to be on or over reading through level at the conclude of 3rd grade,” Reinhardt claimed. “We undoubtedly know that’s heading to aid our students. And this is an possibility for us to seriously align our curriculum, to make certain that all pupils are getting a high degree demanding curriculum, and they’re all organized when they enter seventh grade.”

During a meeting held on Tuesday, January 11, the SCSD Board of Education and learning voted 8-1 to close Mt. Marion Elementary School at the finish of the 2021-22 school year and soak up its learners into the a few remaining elementary educational facilities in the district. The Mt. Marion making will be turned into a common pre-K hub and district offices. 

School officials have reported that the move was an inevitability, in component due to the fact of finances. An October report by the district’s Governance Committee demonstrates a projected $1 million funds shortfall for the SCSD in 2022-23, a $1.7 million hole for 2023-24, a $3.7 million chasm for 2024-25, and a $6.1 million shortfall for 2025-26. 

The Governance review also charted a districtwide student inhabitants which peaked at all around 3,500 in 2005-06 and has been on a continual decrease at any time considering the fact that. The latest pupil population is around 2,400, and nevertheless there are many residential assignments possibly permitted by or becoming reviewed by the Town Arranging Board, the district is however projecting a modest yearly lower in excess of the following ten years, probable dropping to close to 2,100 by the 2029-30 college calendar year.

Last 7 days, Reinhardt reported some of the savings recognized by closing Mt. Marion will be reinvested into programming and other equitable academic chances. 

“Right now we are shelling out our revenue on structures,” Reinhardt reported. “Right now we’re functioning a deficit, but we’re likely to be fiscally dependable to the neighborhood (by dropping to 3 elementary universities) and be in a position to use our revenue towards the sources for all our learners, which include those that may possibly have to have additional assistance. And we’re also doing work towards enrichment for our learners to contend in a global entire world.” 

But even though the district is searching to a world wide long run, it is not forgetting its regional present or past. Reinhardt claimed inclusion signifies a ton of matters in Saugerties, which includes making certain that present Mt. Marion learners are presented sufficient opportunity and assistance as they transfer into their new schools. 

“We want all of our college students to know that they are not marginalized,” Reinhardt reported. “It’s critical that a student feels a part of a team, a sense of belonging and the lecturers will abide by.” 

Reinhardt claimed the district is functioning with mother or father-instructor teams and a burgeoning changeover committee to operate field trips and host neighborhood gatherings when the weather conditions improves. They are also on the lookout to honor the historical past of Mt. Marion to assure it stays portion of the cloth of the district. 

“We want to honor that tradition,” Reinhardt stated. “And we want students to go and stop by their new school and see their new lecturers.”

Joining Mt. Marion college students in new universities will be some of the district’s latest school and staff members, who are in talks with Director of Curriculum and Instruction Gwendolyn Roraback and Director of Human Assets Daniel Erceg to get a feeling of where they’d like to be. College officials will also confer with creating administrators in an work to ensure each individual elementary university has the employees in position to enter the 2022-23 university 12 months with the best prospect for achievement. 

“Once these decisions are manufactured, that data will be set out to staff as shortly as probable for packing and becoming all set for the this summer season,” Reinhardt claimed. 

The future conference of the SCSD Board of Education and learning is scheduled for Tuesday, March 8.

Hyderabad cops bust 2 fake certificate rackets- The New Indian Express

Hyderabad cops bust 2 fake certificate rackets- The New Indian Express

By Express Information Service

HYDERABAD: In a joint procedure, sleuths with the North Zone Endeavor Drive, Asifnagar and Malakpet law enforcement, on Tuesday, busted pretend certification rackets currently being carried out by two consultancy companies. A complete of 10 persons, comprising two agency owners, an assistant professor from Madhya Pradesh and seven learners, were being arrested in two individual instances. 

Hyderabad Metropolis Commissioner of Police (CP) CV Anand reported, “Discrepancies were being in the beginning discovered all through the visa verification of those people with fake certificates and a pair of problems ended up lodged in respective police stations. Right after that, groups swung into motion and arrested the accused.”He said there are additional 5 to 7 consultancy corporations that sell cast certificates. 

“In these conditions, no 1 is gullible, neither the consultants nor the students or their mothers and fathers. Students in the circumstance are taken into custody. The investigation will be concentrated on detecting the variety of pupils the certificates were sold to and even their dad and mom will be taken into custody this time.” The CP said that only stringent motion will preserve such crimes in command, be it the bogus certificates racket or the prescription drugs-relevant instances, and additional that all people related with the offence will be taken into custody.

In collusion with an MP-based varsity

The consultancy corporations have been getting assisted by an Assistant Professor of SRK (Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan University (SRKU), Bhopal. The law enforcement suspect that SRKU’s chairman could also be included in the racket and are probing into it.

“Malakpet law enforcement arrested Ketan Singh, an Assistant Professor of SRKU University, Ancha Srikanth Reddy who is managing Sri Sai Academic Consultancy at Salem Nagar. SRKU, in buy to make illegal income, colluded with two consultancies in Hyderabad and supplied fake certificates to the accused, who then sold them to the learners without the need of any examinations or attendance. In a further comparable arrest, Endeavor Force sleuths and Asifnagar police arrested a single a lot more particular person. The principal accused in this scenario is Gunti Maheshwar Rao working Delight Instructional Academy at Kukatpally, who colluded with the SRKU management. He offered college students with the bogus certificates too,” Anand mentioned.

Among the the arrested by Malakpet law enforcement are 7 students — Dumpally Shashank, Aluka Nishanth Reddy, Kodali Sai Krishna, Veltoor Vinay Kumar, Baddam Anurag Reddy, Srigiri Yoganand Reddy and Mohammad Althashmuddin. Additional than 45 bogus certificates have been seized, though the police suspect that 700 these certificates are in circulation. 

Having observe of this, Telangana State Council of Increased Education and learning Chairman R Limbadri stated, “With the shift to technological innovation, it will enable reduce down the fake certificates rackets in the town. DigiLocker will retain the certificates harmless and no these kinds of crimes can come up in this sophisticated earth. The Point out will also come up with one this kind of confirmed platform and no this kind of fake rackets will be found in existence.”

Racket uncovered during visa checks

The law enforcement found out the racket when the visa verification of those keeping the solid certificates were being being carried out. Issues were being lodged throughout diverse law enforcement stations immediately after which groups swung into motion and nabbed the accused.

Watch now: Classical Conversations provides support for homeschooling families | Education

Watch now: Classical Conversations provides support for homeschooling families | Education






Noah Hynds 1 021122.JPG

Noah Hynds, 13, talks about his project during a science fair at Antioch Christian Church. Hynds is part of Classical Conversations. Students in homeschooling and the parents who teach them get together on Thursdays at Antioch, where the younger children concentrate on Foundations and Essentials, the elementary level.




DECATUR — When Noah Hynds began his project on the merits of various bridge styles, he thought he knew for certain which bridge was the best.

“My hypothesis was that the truss bridge would be the strongest,” he said, “but the beam bridge is actually the strongest. I was wrong, but I learned a lot more being wrong than being right.”







Noah Hynds 1 021122.JPG

Noah Hynds, 13, talks about his project during a science fair at Antioch Christian Church. Hynds is part of Classical Conversations. Students in homeschooling and the parents who teach them get together on Thursdays at Antioch, where the younger children concentrate on Foundations and Essentials, the elementary level.




Being wrong, said Amanda Pflum, a parent in the Classical Conversations group that meets weekly at Antioch Christian Church, is not as important as the process of learning, and learning how to conduct experiments, how to present your findings and that being wrong is not a bad thing, is a major part of the Classical Conversations curriculum.

Students in homeschooling and the parents who teach them get together on Thursdays at Antioch, where the younger children concentrate on Foundations and Essentials, the elementary level.

“We are a community of homeschool moms going through a curriculum,” said Kelli Langstron, director of Foundations and Essentials.

People are also reading…

Classical Conversations was created in 1997 by a homeschooling mom as a way to provide other families with a guide to follow that begins with the basics when children are small, building each year and gradually giving the kids the tools to work more independently, choose their own projects, and pursue their own interests while still having a well-rounded education.

The students learn Latin, English, spelling, American and world history, geography, science and math. By the time students are Noah’s age, for example, Langston said, they can draw a world map from memory, marking each country and its capital, thanks to the years of memorization of facts.

“I’ve come here since I was 8 or 9 years old,” said Noah, now 13. “I really like it because you can learn at your own pace. It’s really fun because I get to hang out with my friends here and still do home school at home. I still do the same amount of work that another kid would do, but I just do it here.”

The guides that are available allow any parent, whether a trained educator or not, to move through the levels with their kids, and the weekly meetings give the kids and parents a chance to get together. The parents support each other and if one parent is good at science and not as comfortable in math, another parent can lend a helping hand and advice. Langston said she didn’t remember as much as she thought she did about fractions until she had to teach her own children, and with five kids, she’s learned right along with them.

Challenge A is for students who are at least 12, roughly seventh grade, and those students spend the day weekly in Latin, research, math and debate. The goal is for the students to be confident and comfortable with presenting their projects and discussing their findings no matter who walks up and asks, Pflum said. The group recently held its annual science fair and while there were no “winners,” they did have a chance to win prizes for various aspects of their presentations.

Challenge B is the next level, eighth grade equivalent, and those students are learning about the legal system by researching and preparing to hold a mock trial.

“We go through a written case,” said Katy Grube, the parent overseeing Challenge B. “It has evidence, and witness statements, and we go through all the rules of trials and the judicial system.”

The guide is in a thick binder and divided into sections devoted to prosecution, defense, choosing a jury and presenting arguments, and the students learn that the same facts might look different depending on whether the prosecution or defense is presenting their case. Student Josiah Porter said it’s a good lesson in learning to discern the merits of both sides of an argument.

“I didn’t know the jury was just regular people,” said Ava Langston. “I guess I thought it was a job, that they hired people to be jurors.”

Violet Pflum, 12, studied the various dyes used for candy, joking that as a kid, she’s a big fan of candy. She chose green candy, using a bowl of green M&Ms as a visual aid in her presentation, and found that yellow and blue dyes are combined to make green; there isn’t a “green” dye at all.







Violet Pflum 1 021122.JPG

Violet Pflum, 12, talks about her science project, which examined different colors of candy. “We get to learn stuff you wouldn’t be able to learn in a normal school,” Violet said of Classical Conversations. 




“We get to learn stuff you wouldn’t be able to learn in a normal school,” Violet said. “We learn Latin. We learn logic. And it’s really fun and you get to do (this) once a week, which gives you time to understand the lesson through the (rest of) the week. It’s a great way to make new friends and have a lot of fun.”

Contact Valerie Wells at (217) 421-7982. Follow her on Twitter: @modgirlreporter