American Thought Leaders - The Charter School Principal Turning Children Toward Plato, Virtue, and the Eternal | Caylan Ford
Episode Date: May 16, 2026“People have lost sight of what education is supposed to be,” said Caylan Ford. In 2022, she founded Canada’s first tuition-free classical charter school, the Calgary Classical Academy, with jus...t a dozen faculty members. Since then, it has grown to 1,500 students across three campuses in Calgary and Edmonton, with thousands more on the waitlist, and has changed its name to Alberta Classical Academy.For Ford, classical education is all about, as she put it, “turning around the soul so that it’s oriented toward things that are actually eternally true and good and enduring.”Canadian parents crave the classical education Alberta Classical Academy provides. “A lot of the parents who come to us are absolutely desperate. … The existence of this school is like an answered prayer,” Ford said.Surprisingly, Alberta is the only province in Canada that allows charter schools. Just as in America, Alberta’s charter schools are public schools that do not charge tuition. They are statutorily barred from having a religious affiliation.Students study Latin beginning in Grade 5, with additional language options like French in high school. Much emphasis is given to the coherent study of history.“Our students read a lot of primary source material; they’re not judging the past through current prejudices. They’re trying to understand it on its own terms,” Ford said.The school also has a rich world literature curriculum where students memorize a lot, for example, poetry.“We do a lot of memorization work, partly because we want to help them furnish beautiful inner worlds. We want their minds and their souls to be places into which they can retire and find themselves refreshed and renewed,” Ford said.Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
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The primary ends of education has to focus on the idea that a person has a soul,
that there are certain things that our souls need perennially.
Kaelan Ford is the founder of Calgary Classical Academy,
a tuition-free public charter school where a very different vision of education is taking shape.
So education in this sense is about turning around the soul so that it's oriented
toward things that are actually eternally true and good and enduring.
That vision is brought to life through
through a classical liberal arts education,
one that draws on history, philosophy, and great books.
They're able to think more about the connecting ideas and themes
and ask interesting questions about history
and about the human experience.
Students aren't just learning facts.
They're learning to think, question, and understand the world,
while being immersed in arts, music, and craftsmanship
that shape both intellect and character.
What does virtue mean to you?
That's a good question.
Training in moral and intellectual discernment
to allow someone to more readily and accurately judge
between virtue and vice, justice and injustice, beauty and baseness.
We grew from just under 300 students
and a little more than a dozen faculty.
We now have 1,500 students in three campuses
with close 200 teachers.
A sign that many are searching for something more,
an education that speaks not just to the mind,
but also to the soul.
This is American Thought Leaders, and I'm Yanya Kellick.
What does virtue mean to you?
Virtue means to me the pursuance of the good.
So here we learn about the transcendentals, which are the true, the good, and the beautiful.
So when you pursue virtue, you pursue those things.
Virtue is how you act.
And if you have a specific virtue, like benevolence, you show it and how you act and how you speak to people, it's the opposite of a vice.
And a vice is like something, a detrimental property.
And virtue is good.
Well, in this school, we do Latin, but in my old school, we did not have Latin.
In fact, we didn't even have, like, orchestra, like any instrument play, just a bare,
minimum of what they have need. This school is way different because they use their budget good
and uses it for libraries, as you can see, classroom decoration, textbooks, and they're just really
good quality, and I really like, admire that. What's the best thing about this place? I think it is
the community that we've cultivated here. My vice principal, Mr. Hertzbrung, has said it in this way,
which I really, I love the way that he put it. He said, when you look in the playground, there's
child that's alone. There's no child that's playing alone. And I think that's a really beautiful
and important factor of a school, the community and the companionship.
I do have a lot of friends. That's one of the big factors.
What in your understanding makes classical education distinct?
Well, we do learn more Latin and it's more organized than a public school. This school
is way different because they actually care will actually spend time with you sacrificing their breaks
math here is more way more advanced i feel like science here is also way better yes they're realizing
that the world needs periods of sleep and of vitality and that the sleep is a necessary part oh awesome
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Kaelan Ford, such a pleasure to have you on American Thought Leaders.
Well, thank you for having me on.
You have a unique way of approaching education.
And so in your view, what is the real problem with education as it exists today?
I think the problem with education as it exists today begins with first principles.
People have lost sight of what education is supposed to be for because they've lost sight of what a human being is for.
So I think if you were to survey most educators today and or policymakers in this realm of education and ask them what the purpose of schooling is, they would probably give you an answer like, well, it's to prepare people for the workforce.
Or if they have maybe a more sort of activist bent, they might say it's to educate children to be agents of change, who will transform society in some direction or other that they consider favorable.
And our view is that human beings don't exist merely to be future workers.
That's kind of a happy side effect if you can contribute to your society in a productive way.
But the primary ends of education has to focus on the idea that a person has a soul,
that there are certain things that our souls need perennially.
And I think it needs to answer to those sort of essential needs of the human soul.
When I think of classical education, I think about educating people to be virtuous and to understand beauty.
And so you're talking about something even a little deeper than that.
There's a definition of education from Dr. Johnson's dictionary, right?
The first real comprehensive English dictionary, where it's described as something like formation in manners and habits.
And then he draws a reference to Richard Hooker's work, who talks about the idea of education as training in moral.
and intellectual discernment to allow someone to more readily and accurately judge between
virtue and vice, justice and injustice, beauty and baseness. So I think there's this element of
fostering those faculties of discernment that's a big part of it. But if we look at the root of the
term to educate, it comes from the Latin educary, which means to extract or to draw out,
which of course raises the question to draw out of what.
And the image that for me comes to mind is going back to the original academy, Plato's Grove in Academi,
where he talked about, he elaborated the allegory of the cave.
And in this allegory, you picture human beings as prisoners inside a cave,
their necks and their limbs are bound to a wall,
and so that they can face only one direction.
So they're looking at a wall of the cave
and they're sitting in front of a wall
to which they're bound.
Behind that wall is a perpetually blazing fire.
And then someone is passing artifacts
above the wall to cast shadows.
So the prisoners are basically looking at
this play of shadows that's being cast on the wall.
So puppets and figurines
and they mistake these projections
for reality, but they don't realize that this is actually just a sort of faint shadow or simulacrum.
And so in Plato's telling, then, one day you imagine that one of these people is forcibly
unshackled, made to stand up and to turn around. And so for the first time, they actually see
the fire that is creating these shadows. And this burns the eyes, right? If you're accustomed to
darkness, when you start to see something that is closer to truth, it can feel uncomfortable at first.
And then they're pulled forcibly out of the mouth of the cave and into the sun, which is, in this metaphor, kind of, it represents the agathon, the ultimate good, the source of things in creation.
And this is even more painful, of course.
But through this process, the person comes to realize that they have encountered reality.
It's this, what Henri Bergson calls the opening of the soul.
So you're actually, it's this sort of almost sublime, almost ecstatic encounter with reality as it truly is.
Now if that person were to go back down into the cave and try to enjoin their fellows to come out of the cave to unshackle themselves, in all likelihood, most people are going to disbelieve them, he'll be laughed at, he'll probably be persecuted.
So if this person goes back down into the cave and tries to free their fellow prisoners, most likely he'll be set upon and persecuted and torn to pieces.
But in Plato's telling, a person still has a kind of obligation to go back down into the cave and to try to raise people up and to turn them around.
So education in this sense is about turning around the soul so that it's oriented toward things that are actually eternally true and good and enduring and to draw them out of the cave into the light of reality.
So that to me is what education is really about is it evokes this image of pulling people out of the shackles.
ignorance, but also turning their souls toward what is actually eternally true and good for them.
You know, what you described earlier makes me think about something that I've just been
coming up against in this show regularly, and it's just how our society has really turned
towards utilitarianism in all sorts of forms. And because what you're talking about is, again,
sort of a realm that I think a lot of people just don't simply think about today, what, never mind
about educating their kids.
Yeah, well, absolutely.
And I think this is one of the consequences of when we push questions of ultimate concern,
questions that engender like metaphysical questions or questions about, you know,
what is life for?
Why do we come here?
Where do we go after death?
These are kind of, to me, the ultimate questions.
And if we don't have answers to those, I don't know, for me,
everything else sort of starts to seem a little meaning.
list, but we've relegated those questions to the margins of our consciousness and are very
fixated on the material, on the things that can be kind of empirically demonstrated, you know,
sensed through the sensory organs, held and possessed. But ultimately those things are all
fleeting. And so what are we really left with when those things go away? Well, the complication
that I think a number of people might respond with, right, to what you just said is that, yeah,
But there's all sorts of different models of how that works and how do we decide and why should one model dominate another.
And are they even true in the first place? How do we know that?
That's a great question. So I turn back to the etymology of the word philosophy.
So philosophy means it's love of wisdom. It's not a claim to possess wisdom.
So it's not perfect knowledge of everything that is true,
everything that is kind of transcendently real. It's an orientation toward it, so it's a loving
orientation of the soul to try to seek what is true and good. Recognizing, you know, the limits of
human wisdom. We have pretty stark cognitive limitations, so we'll never have perfect knowledge
of these things. We have to be humble in our approach to it. But the inability to perfectly
grasp these concepts at every level of manifestation isn't reason to sort of throw up your arms and
say, well, we shouldn't try then, right? I think it's just, it's an undertaking that we need to,
we need to cultivate the habits to allow us to do it. We need to try to temper our own souls
so that we acquire that discernment, that sight. You know, it takes diligent study, and I think,
you know, it takes sort of fortitude and, of course, a sort of epistemic humility. But it's not
reason to say, let's not try in the first place.
if we accept the premise that claims about what is true or just or beautiful are all merely fungable
and that these are totally subjective, right?
If you have your truth, I have my truth, what's beautiful to me is ugly to you.
I don't think it's possible to share a society.
There are, of course, there's a huge array of differences between people, but I think on these
kind of fundamental things, we probably do agree.
even across cultures, across faith traditions,
on a lot of the really fundamental questions.
But if we say that these things aren't real,
then we lose the collective criteria
by which we can actually adjudicate moral disputes.
So, you know, typically if two people disagree about something,
we might, though we disagree, say that, well, we both want what's true.
And then we can compare our ideas, then we can debate,
we can engage in dialogue,
and we can try to approach the truth more closely.
But if you say there's no such thing as truth or I disagree fundamentally about the value of truth,
then there is no process by which we can adjudicate those disputes.
We're basically just left with power, with violence.
And I think you get a lot of sort of civilizational fraying at that point.
So we need some kind of common moral vocabulary.
We need some set standards against which human beings can judge their own actions.
against which we can judge, you know, the acts of government, whether it's just or unjust.
So without those transcendent standards, all you're left with is power.
I don't think that's a world that anyone wants to inhabit.
Well, you know, and apparently a lot of people who have kids agree with you as this, you know,
you have this giant waiting list for people that want to come to your school.
You know, before we dive into, you know, how does this look practically?
there's a few of these types of lessons that a very young child could learn easily with,
you know, even kind of with building blocks or something like this.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
So, so we'll comment on this, please.
And then let's get more into the practical reality of what's happening with these kids when they land and start, you know,
you're starting to shift them away from the wall or cave wall.
So you're totally right.
And I attribute that in part to the fact.
that most students never study history in a coherent or sequential way.
So here in Alberta, history is not part of the mandatory curriculum.
You get little smatterings of it here and there.
It's never systematic.
There's no coherent narrative.
It's often kind of a theme or a sort of thematic lens through which you might view a couple
episodes in history.
But if you want to inculcate a sense of gratitude, I think it really helps if you take
students through the process of how are early civilizations formed? What's the transition from
a nomadic society to a sedentary to a civilized society? What is a civilizational
golden age? What are the qualities that characterize it? How do you get there? By
studying this systematically as our students do, you start to understand that actually
resting order from chaos is really, really hard. That peace and prosperity and freedom
are not the default conditions of human civilizations or of human societies throughout history.
And so to the extent that we enjoy those, they're very, very hard one.
We try to teach our students too that it's much easier to destroy something than it is to build.
You know, building a prosperous civilization, one that's flourishing in arts and learning and culture,
is a task of hundreds if not thousands of years.
So by taking them through this history cycle, by having them inhabit
the minds of people in different periods in history. So our students read a lot of primary source
material. They're not judging the past through current prejudices. They're trying to understand
it on its own terms. And by helping them understand that even our scientific developments
were arrived at through an iterative process spanning many, many generations. I think this all
inculcates intellectual habits of gratitude, of humility, and it inclines us more to be a little bit more
deferential toward what we've inherited, not blindly deferential, but a little bit more inclined to say,
all right, this, we've inherited something precious. We should make ourselves fit stewards to receive
this tradition, hopefully improve upon it and pass it along to the next generation.
It just reminds me of something that Tom Sol wrote or said, which is that we're kind of in the
world where we've replaced what works with what sounds good. Yeah. So,
this brings me back to the metaphysical first principles thing. Classical education, not just in the West.
I think this is true, too, if you look at the classical pedagogical traditions from ancient China,
for example. They share certain principles. One is that the created order of the universe actually
is an orderly harmonious thing. It's not random and chaotic, right? There's something
intelligible behind how the universe exists, how we exist in relation to it, that that thing is good.
So in the far east, for example, there's Taoist traditions where the Tao is like the animating
force behind the universe.
It's sort of the principle that governs it, the thing that comprises everything, and it's fundamentally
a good quality.
So if you start from, you know, reality exists, it's ordered, it's harmonious, and it's
sense and it's good and we can attune our souls to it, right? So the intellectual process begins
with apprehension, with perception of what is, what is real, what's true, and then we move to,
how do we attune ourselves to that quality? Progressive education flips this, and it basically
says that either truth doesn't exist in a kind of real way, or it does exist, but is disordered.
And so rather than trying to attune our souls to this like harmonious quality of the universe and live in symbiosis with it, progressive education says, no, there's something disordered about the world.
And the task of the child and the future adult is to transform the world, to use knowledge to try to fix it, to remedy it.
And so I think that's a very, that relates to what you said, that rather than, or, I mean, it's kind of reminiscent of the classic Marx, Marx,
isn't it his epitaph?
The Marxist line that philosophy hitherto has always sought to describe the world, the real
purpose is to transform it, that kind of idea.
This is the idea behind progressive education.
It's not a loving, humble approach to reality.
It's kind of a spiteful, hateful reality's bad, let's transform it.
But with all the best intentions, of course.
Yes.
Well, to try to usher in a utopia, right, eventually.
I was going to ask you how Paulo Freire's influence.
There's something we've covered on the show quite a bit is critical pedagogy.
Viewers can look back to some episodes around.
I'm happy to talk about Paula Freire's pernicious influence.
This is one of the most influential people across the entire Western educational system.
Yes. And just very briefly, right, if you could kind of expand a little bit of on what you just said and how that figures in and how that's in contrast with this approach.
Absolutely. So Palo Friere was a Brazilian Marxist scholar of education. And his book, Pedagogy of the Oppressed, is apparently the third most frequently cited work of social science in history, which is incredible, particularly given that almost no one has ever heard of it. So that tells you,
how influential it is in education faculties, that this is kind of the only place where it's studied,
and it's studied so often as to be the third most frequently cited work of social science.
It's almost impossible to get an education degree without being steeped, knowingly or unknowingly,
in his ideas.
The most superficial idea that he is associated with is he developed, I think, this false dichotomy
where he says that traditional educators are engaged in a banking model of education,
where the teacher is in charge and they make deposits of knowledge into the presumably empty brains of the student.
And that this dynamic primes students to accept oppression.
Now, I don't think that this is actually a description of traditional education.
I have never met an educator, even the most kind of old school ones who actually project such total ignorance onto the minds of their pupils, right?
there's always some kind of reciprocal relationship there, there's always some presumption that
you're building on some scaffolding that they already have some insight, and you're helping them develop
that. But what he's actually saying is, so one of the things he says basically is that teachers
shouldn't be relating to their students in this hierarchical way. They should be teacher students and
student teachers, and you should blur those lines. This manifests in modern pedagogical,
instruction as education faculties will tell teachers, in some cases, you should never be at the
front of the classroom. You should never be lecturing. Your job is just to help co-construct meaning
to facilitate this process with your students. And they'll say things like, you know, you need to make
the learning relevant to the experience of the students. Rather than trying to pull them up and make
them worthy of something beyond themselves, you should shrink what you're teaching down to their
frame, which I think is sort of a pretty deadening way to try to educate someone.
But at a deeper level, what Freire says is that the purpose of education is to develop what he
calls critical consciousness.
And critical consciousness means an awareness of the oppressive nature of reality and then
undertaking action to destroy the limitations and the oppressive conditions under which you find
yourself. Now, his philosophy would be more sympathetic if he narrowed its scope. So he was in Brazil,
you know, teaching literacy to the descendants of slaves, right? People who maybe were a little bit
fatalist, maybe didn't feel they had much agency. So in that context, you could almost sympathize
with what he's saying, that he wants people to sort of perceive their limits, perceive how they're
oppressed and take action to better their lives. Except that he doesn't limit the scope. He says
this is a universalizable pedagogy that can apply at all times and places to bring about
endless perpetual revolution, and it's about the endless transformation of reality. And he never
says in what direction reality should be transformed, really. He never says to what end. The point is
the assertion of human will over reality. That's the whole point, is, I think,
It's about overthrowing the image that there is something transcendent.
He often uses the language of rejecting reality as a gift.
So it's about rejecting the givenness of reality and rejecting the gift and making it yourself.
So he says things like freedom is not acquired as a gift.
It's acquired through conquest.
So there's something very like at a certain point when you're reading through Friere,
I was reading him in parallel to reading Milton's
Paradise Lost. And in a certain point, the voices between Milton's illustration of Satan and Frere
becomes very difficult to discern, except that one's much more poetical than the other. But it's
this idea of like, you know, you don't want to exist in this state of servile pomp, receiving gifts
from God. You want to be the ruler of your own world, the maker of your own world, the
creator of reality. The eraser of the distinction between student and teacher,
So everything is all kind of hierarchies are equalized and leveled.
You get curricula that are often stripped of a lot of content
because you're supposed to make everything relevant to the students' immediate frame of reference.
You're not trying to stretch them to reach beyond themselves.
You're trying to shrink the world down for them.
You get a lot of disorder.
So Frey also mocked the idea that the teacher should discipline students, right?
This too is priming them for oppression.
It's priming them to model themselves.
on the teacher's expectations, and that's, according to Freire, what you're not supposed to do.
So I think his ideas are also responsible for a lot of the breakdown in order and discipline
in schools, such that violence is endemic. It's one of the leading causes of teacher attrition now.
And then I think at a deeper metaphysical level, you get teachers who view their role as
transforming students into activists who enter every situation in their lives, asking the question,
who is oppressing whom and how do I destroy this system?
So it sounds like classical education, you know,
basically completely rejects this model as sort of like pulls it out from,
I mean, this is something that's, I know, taught, you know,
across various teachers' colleges,
I think probably every teacher's college almost that exists.
But, and somehow you're creating a school and education without it.
How do you manage to do that?
if this is kind of the centerpiece of what's required in a way.
Well, it's quite challenging in part because we haven't really had classical education
for a couple generations now.
So most of our teachers were not educated in this way.
They were educated in something that's more closely resembles the kind of modern or progressive
model.
So it's an interesting process of trying to reach back and rediscover this tradition.
And the way we do that is, well, this is a tradition.
that is very, very heavily documented.
So, you know, our teachers will do book studies
in our first year we studied Aristotle's ethics together,
and then the next year we read the Republic together.
And this year, kind of working our way
through canonical texts from classical antiquity
in the pre-Socratics through to scholastics
of the Middle Ages up to modern times,
with some Confucian educational tradition
thrown in there as well.
So it's an ongoing process of trying to recover,
that tradition, even among those of us who didn't directly inherited ourselves.
So who are these teachers?
Well, so when I first applied to open a charter school in Alberta in 2021, and it was finally
approved in January 2022. And then it was kind of a rushed process to try to figure out,
well, what's our building going to be? We have to put together a board of directors, develop
a curriculum, put policy together, enroll hundreds of students and hire, I think in our first
year it was about 15, 16 teachers. And I was really worried initially that we wouldn't find the
teachers who could actually teach this program. So, you know, we're looking for people with deep
content knowledge who are actually who view themselves as subject matter experts, for people
with certain pedagogical training. That's, you know, the opposite of the progressive kind
of pedagogical fads and going back to things that actually work, but also people with the right
philosophical disposition, that they're interested in want to pursue a very different kind of project.
So I was really worried about this in our first year, and yet there they were. We, you know, it was
people who in many cases had been in other public schools kind of keeping their heads down. People
who had often been passed over up for promotion opportunities because they didn't tow the
line ideologically, but were actually incredibly competent teachers and as we discovered, administrators.
And a handful of people who had doctorates or advanced degrees in classics, in linguistics,
in medieval studies, who didn't find a home in academia but wanted to teach in the classroom.
So we've been able to find a way to hire a number of these people as well to come into, you know,
in a K-12 setting and be our teachers.
And so how did you find them?
This was a total, if you build it, they will come situation.
So built a website and people started finding it and then telling their friends who they thought were sound.
So we grew from in our first year, we were kindergarten to grade six with about just under 300 students and a little more than a dozen faculty.
We now have over 100 school-based staff.
We're just entering our fourth year.
We have 1,500 students and three campuses with over 100 or close to 100 teachers.
That's pretty rapid growth.
It's very rapid growth.
Yeah, a number of them have also moved to Alberta to teach for us.
So we have a few people who've moved from other countries or continents
and certainly other provinces to come teach at our schools.
This classical education idea, I mean, okay, first of all, charter schools at all,
it's kind of for, in Canada, it's not something that's known at all.
In the U.S., it's a well-known approach.
And, you know, it stirs controversy, but a lot of charter schools do very well
and teaching in a way more similar to what you describe.
I don't think they all adopt the classical model entirely,
but there's certainly amazing schools that do that as well.
So in Canada, it's rare, or I think the one example, right?
Yeah.
So Alberta is the only Canadian province that allows charter schools.
And yeah, they're widely misunderstood here.
People confuse them with private schools.
They think we charge tuition.
We don't, so we charge no tuition.
We are statutorily barred from having a religious affiliation.
We take students from all across the city, so a huge range of socioeconomic backgrounds,
religious, ethnic backgrounds.
About 20% of our students are low income, a similar percentage are English as a second language students.
So it's a really, really diverse population.
You know, something that's been coming up in recent interviews I've been doing is the concept of natural law.
or the Tao actually, as C.S. Lewis called it.
And so this, it's interesting as you're describing this, you know,
sort of search for the truth, right?
And, you know, some sort of divinity.
It could run afoul of these restrictions that you have.
But you found a way, you found a way to look at this.
Is it through natural law and looking at it that way?
So charter schools in Alberta are not allowed to have a faith orientation or have an affiliation with a specific denomination or church or faith group.
But that doesn't mean that we need to be secular in the sense of being unconcerned with ultimate questions.
I think for any kind of epistemological undertaking to make sense, any attempt to find truth to make sense, whether it's applied to math or science, whether it's applied to math or science,
anything. You have to have some kind of metaphysical ground. You have to believe, for example,
that truth is good, and so you should seek it. Right. So if you don't have even that,
then why are you studying anything? What, you know, what is this math? What is this knowledge?
If you can't start from the premise that truth is a real thing, that we have reason and can seek
it, and that it's good. So you need a metaphysical ground. And even if you deny that you have one,
you still have one, right? So I was just talking about Paulo Freire's metaphysics. That's a definite
metaphysics. That's a set of quasi-theological beliefs. You always have a metaphysics. You always have
some kind of theology. Sometimes you just don't recognize what it is. And I think what we're doing
is we're uniting a lot of traditions together. So these beliefs about, you know, the existence of
truth. This is not something that's unique to a single faith tradition, right? This is shared
across numerous philosophical and religious traditions spanning all of human history. So I think that
we're able to pick up on those unifying elements, right? Every human culture cares about virtue, right?
And has sometimes slightly different language to describe it, but really they're kind of getting at the
same thing. So that's what we're trying to do is we're not trying to tell students you have to have
this faith or this interpretation, and we actually try to expose them to different world religious
traditions in the course of teaching about history, because you can't understand the human experience
without understanding the faith dimension. But we're not trying to teach them to adopt a particular
religion or a set of religious claims. So tell me how the curriculum looks like.
So our curriculum is pretty unique in several different ways. We are, again,
statutorily bound to teach the Alberta curriculum, but we find it's highly permeable to our
approach and we can then enhance it and add additional content that we think is important for the
children to learn. So there's all the standard core academic programs, as well as our students
study Latin beginning in grade five, so it's mandatory all through their middle school years,
and then in high school they have additional language options as well. Like French, we're looking
at rolling out a Mandarin option, ancient Greek.
and even more advanced Latin and philology.
Our students study world history in a sequential recurring way.
So, as I mentioned, the Alberta curriculum actually doesn't really teach history or very, very little of it.
But our students starting in kindergarten learn about ancient civilizations, the earliest known civilizations.
By grade two, they're up to classical Greek antiquity, ancient Rome, Anglo-Saxon England,
kind of Chinese, Middle Ages, Morian Empire, India.
and then they progress through the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, early modern period, the age of exploration, and into the modern world.
And then by grade five, they're cycling back to the ancient world again.
And at that point, they're at a different stage of cognitive development.
They're able to engage more with primary sources.
They're able to think more about the connecting ideas and themes and ask interesting questions about history and about the human experience.
And then we go through that cycle again.
So by the time they've completed high school, they've kind of done three rounds of world history, philosophy, and studied biographies of great people, studied the great faith traditions.
We also have a great books program.
So we have a sort of prescriptive book list, and it takes students through a lot of the Western canon.
We start with like what we would call good books when they're in early elementary, and then we move into great books, into those really.
enduring classics that have gone past through the filter of time and have demonstrated their
value over many generations. So by the time they're in high school, they're reading like
Boethius, the Consolations of Philosophy, and Dante and Milton, Plato and Aristotle, they also
study works like the Daouda Jing or the analects of Confucius, for example, and some of the Chinese
classics. So it's a very rich world literature curriculum. They study and memorize a lot of
poetry. So we do a lot of memorization work, partly because we want to help them furnish
beautiful inner worlds. We want their minds and their souls to be places into which they can retire
and find themselves refreshed and renewed, and a place where they can find consolation
amidst grief and have different resources that they can draw on. So our students memorize a lot
of poetry. We do classical drama. They do a lot of Shakespeare, Sophocles, Escalis.
But the difference in approach also permeates the maths and sciences.
So for example, our grade 9s this year and our grade 8s will be doing a lot of Euclidean proofs.
So they'll be working their way through some books of Euclid, studying geometry and getting
into the habit of forming mathematical proofs.
Sciences too, sometimes they'll start with primary source readings from Aristotle, for example,
as they get into the high school sciences.
So it permeates all the different aspects of our curriculum.
And then of course we have, you know, systematic instruction in fine arts, like drawing, painting,
sculpture.
We'd eventually like to offer a traditional crafts and building arts component.
But we're getting there.
It's kind of contingent on facilities, things like plasterwork and stone masonry.
And also a very strong emphasis on music.
So we have choral instruction, instrumental music, a lot of music theory.
So the students are getting a very, very rich music education.
And that's partly because when you go back and think about, when we say that we're offering
a classical liberal arts education, and people have a lot of misapprehensions about what
the liberal arts means.
They think it's the humanities or they think it's kind of, some people, I think, have a
slightly dismissive view of what a liberal arts major might look like, for example, in college.
But the traditional liberal arts come from the ancient Greeks, and then were codified in the
medieval era. There's seven classical liberal arts. It's grammar, logic, or dialectic, and rhetoric,
as well as arithmetic, geometry, music, crucially, and astronomy, which is kind of like physics.
It's the study of magnitude and motion.
So music is considered the crown of these in many ways
because music is the study, it's almost a mathematical study
of ratios and harmonies.
And one of the purposes of studying music
is you study the harmony of things
and then you attune your own soul to that harmony.
So studying good music, properly ordered music,
helps you order your own soul and bring it into harmony as well.
As you're describing all this,
I keep thinking to myself, you're really trying to help educate grounded, thoughtful, engaged people in society.
Yeah, absolutely.
So look, I think a lot of what we would measure our success by is not just how many of our students go on to elite universities, right?
We would measure our success by questions like, do you participate in voluntary civic organizations?
did you marry and have children, which is not for everyone, but it's probably for the vast
majority of people, right?
Do you continue to read for leisure?
Do you feel that your life is meaningful?
Do you have sort of an active spiritual life, whatever that may mean to you?
So these are, I think, the metrics by which we would measure our success, not the kind of
very narrow, did you go to university, did you get an elite kind of professional job?
Again, those are good things, but we have to put first things first things first.
and second things second. And if you put the first things first, you'll probably get the second
order benefits. If you put the second order things first, you may not get either.
Well, as you're describing the curriculum, especially for the younger students, I was
thinking about myself, I think I need to take this classes, you know? I think I missed out on this.
Well, my seven-year-old will happily tell you all about, she's like studying ancient Greece
right now, and she would happily tell you all about it.
So you basically have to move to Calgary.
or Edmonton to be involved in a classical curriculum in Canada. And frankly, you know,
there just aren't any in the entire continent, actually, that are happening.
Yeah. So in the United States, there's quite an active, I'll call it like a neoclassical
movement, because, of course, we're taking a classical tradition and then trying to distill
things that work in a modern context, right? So it's quite active in the U.S.
There are a lot of parochial schools, private and charter schools, offering some
version of classical education, but there was really nothing in Canada outside of a very small
smattering of private, usually religious schools. So there was nothing in Alberta, there's certainly
nothing that's tuition-free, almost nothing that is non-sectarian. So the very, very few programs
that were doing this, we're doing it with a religious lens, and so weren't necessarily available
to the general public. So ours is the first network of tuition-free, non-sectarian classical
education programs in Canada.
And so, you know, you have 1,500 students now. What is the trajectory here?
Well, we could have doubled that number this year if we had the facilities for it. We typically
have enough applicants for kindergarten that we could fill 30 to 50 kindergarten classes per year.
We just don't have the facilities to accommodate that at this stage.
And you could scale that quickly, you think?
We could scale very quickly. There's two major impediments to growth. One is access to facilities.
It costs, you know, $50 million plus to build a new school here.
So most of our schools are actually, they weren't built as school buildings.
They're buildings that we lease, that we renovated.
One is a former military barracks built right after the Second World War.
Another is a former commercial office building that we've kind of retrofitted.
So it's the availability of capital and facilities is the major impediment.
And then the second impediment to growth is the pipeline of teachers.
Right?
That's what I was thinking.
Yeah.
Those are the two biggest things.
But there's incredible demand every year for this program.
And we're just like we're doing everything we can to try to acquire new facilities, to renovate them, to open a new geographic markets.
It's just, yeah, we're trying to do our best to meet that demand because we know that parents are not just hungry for this, but a lot of the parents who come to us are absolutely desperate.
They say, I don't know what to do.
do for my child's education. The existence of this school is like an answered prayer. We would
do anything to get in. And I don't know what to do if I don't get in. Is there a boarding
school element? No, no, it's not boarding. So it's, yeah, it's all day school and all tuition-free.
Oh, no, what I mean is can a student that, you know, can parents send their kids here, right?
Or is it all local? Is it all local? Is it all local? Okay. But so to basically,
basically 1,500 local students across these two cities.
Yes.
Okay. So it sounds like you want to grow, and you're ready to do it, you need resources,
and you need teachers being a major resource like that. Just practically,
what would be the most useful thing for you to be able to move ahead with growing this system?
Well, we would like our own faculty of education.
So, and ironically, I think the next step is to try to establish
our own post-secondary institution to train our own pipeline of teachers, try to do something
about the problem that we have a generation of adults who, for the most part, didn't receive this
education themselves. We'd like to start training people to be able to teach in our school,
to be able to pass on these traditions. And that, yeah, probably involves starting our own
post-secondary institutions. So again, this is something that there are examples of this in the
states. There are schools like, you know, U. Dallas comes to mind. And, you know,
and several other small private liberal arts schools in the U.S.,
there isn't really anything like that in Canada.
So that may be a first step towards solving that problem long term.
And what would be, you know, a big lesson or two that you learned along the way
that, you know, you're trying to apply now?
When you think about the challenges, no, like every single thing has been,
we've had to fight for everything here.
we've had buildings fall through a month before we were supposed to open.
Like everything from city permit problems to fire department problems to, you know, like not having bus drivers.
Just everything that could go wrong with a startup has gone wrong.
And that's to be expected partly.
I think when you're trying to accomplish things, you can expect a commensurate degree of difficulty to accompany it.
Right? You need trials to temper you.
If I can jump in, you know, what strikes me is something that probably is central to classical education is precisely this lesson.
Would you agree?
Yeah, that you can expect trials in life, and the question is how do you bear them well?
Yeah. Well, this is, I think this is another huge problem with modern education is that you have a generation of students who are anxious, depressed, who struggle.
with suicidal ideation, who struggle most of all with lacking a sense of meaning. So when they
encounter difficulties or suffering, they don't necessarily have a narrative to help them understand
its purpose, right? It's just unpleasant. And so one of the things that we want to try to do is
to cultivate resilience in our students to help give them models of what is a meaningful life?
It's not a life that's full of pleasure and ease, right? But when you actually study human
beings in history who've overcome great things, who've left a beautiful legacy that often involves
suffering, sometimes some very, very deep tragedy and despair, and then being able to transcend
it or make meaning of it to redeem it in some way. So those are some of the things that we want
our students to be able to come away with is a way of making meaning of their experiences,
the tools to be able to bear hardships with equanimity, with stillness in their hearts,
because it is inevitable.
And in a way, according to many of the traditions that you've described,
a kind of central part of the meaning of life, actually, wouldn't you say?
Oh, absolutely.
So, like, I remember talking with some of the grade twos about this, I think, about Taoism.
And Taoism has the symbol of the Taiji or what people call the Yin Yang symbol.
And even grade twos can understand this concept,
that you can't really have light without darkness.
You know, you need this duality between things that are sweet and things that are bitter,
between dark and light, highs and lows, in order to generate flourishing,
in order for life to be, like, to have vitality.
And so you have to expect both of these things
and be able to sort of see them as part of a coherent whole
that is whole because it has both elements.
So what's the bottom line here, Caitlin?
So, okay, so I said right at the outset, you asked me what, how do I diagnose the problem with modern education?
And I said, we've forgotten what education is for because we've forgotten what human beings are for.
And to answer that a little bit, human beings are not made for a life merely of pleasure, of ease, of sweetness and delight all of the time.
Our lives are not merely for material accretion.
It's not to possess things.
All of our worldly possessions, whether it's social approbation, our friends, our sense of belonging, our ranks or titles or prestige or material things, all of that will perish.
It will all be taken from us, whether at death or at some earlier time.
And philosophy, again, to go back to Plato, is about preparing to die well.
And we do that partly by being able to encounter those little deaths in life, the little sacrifices
that we make, learning how to bear those well with grace, with gratitude.
And that prepares us, I think, yeah, it prepares us for a life of meaning.
If we can prepare ourselves to die well, then we're also preparing ourselves to live well.
This is our front office here. And then this here is our Grade 5 corridor. The Grade 5 study ancient history from ancient Mesopotamians, Egyptians, Indus River civilizations, but then they all progress up through the fall of Rome. So we thought we would see this hallway.
So what happened in that building? Yes. Oh, the Gladiators is a popular talk.
So this is one example. So as I mentioned, we try to include some art that is representative of different cultures, different faith traditions, but all of which are kind of orient students towards something that's beautiful and transcendent.
So this is a classical Chinese painting and it's the descent of various bodhisattvas from the heavens.
This is our east entrance. So we have a ceiling panel from a Buddhist temple from a Buddhist
temple in Beijing, a Ming era Buddhist temple.
Well, so this is, Jacques Louis Debeb.
It was unfortunately kind of the artist of the French Revolution,
but I'm not going to hold that against him
because he was also a great neoclassicist.
So this is depicting Socrates's speech,
just as he's about to drink the hemlock,
as described in Plato's dialogue, the Theta.
So he's expounding on what happens to the soul after death,
and his friends are around him weeping,
and he's basically trying to console them,
saying, why are you fearing for me?
Are You Fearing for me, you know, the soul doesn't just descend into Hades.
My soul is, you know, I've cultivated myself such that my soul is pure and unalloyed,
and so on my death I will return and kind of unify with those qualities in the heavens.
The Acropolis.
Oh, yes.
This is the Acropolis.
But here, I'm going to show you my favorites.
There's two that are my favorites.
So this is the School of Athens.
So one of the fun, so Raphael painted himself.
This is Raphael, staring at you.
And then he painted these figures.
So this is Aristotle who's pointing to the earth
because his philosophy concerns things that are kind of practical
in a sense, whereas Plato is pointing up toward the heavens,
toward the eternal.
And then this is Socrates in dialogue,
maybe with Alexander the Great, maybe with Alcibiades.
This is a painting full of anachronisms.
But one of the fun things is that Raphael modeled them on his friends.
So he made Plato in the image of Leonardo da Vinci.
Da Vinci and Heraclitus in the image of Michelangelo, I think, and then Diogenes sprawling
on the steps and the mathematicians calculating the spheres and things.
That's one of my other favorites.
This is a fresco.
It's actually quite a small city or town in Italy, his name I forget, and it was done by
a student of Raphael's.
And this is a ceiling fresco, and it kind of descends down the walls.
and this is the fall of the giants.
Many of our faculty, we hire them initially as tutors,
but they have doctorates, and then we get this letter for them
from the minister so that they can be full teachers
after we've kind of made sure that they're cool.
Dr. Donner's very cool.
So this has been just an amazing, truly amazing experience, actually.
I can't wait to see, you know, take a few years,
but I can't wait to see what happens with these kids.
I look forward to it too.
Yeah.
Thank you so much.
It was wonderful.
Thank you.
Thank you.
