Common Place Company
Our latest issue, EXPECT, is now available.
See that picture of my Riverside Shakespeare? I read it in college at the University of Minnesota many years ago. I didn't enjoy it and plowed through it for the grade. Almost entire plays have pink highlighter throughout as I grappled with each play at breakneck speed.
If there's one thing that strikes me when I read what the Parents Union School (PUS - Charlotte Mason's schools for children) teachers thought about teaching Shakespeare, it would be the joy with which the plays were approached and appreciated by both teachers and students.
I am often asked by parents why we read Shakespeare in a living education. Let me answer by quoting author Gertrude Slaughter, sharing wisdom from Charlotte Mason, and telling about a few of my own experiences. “Many a child has entered into Shakespeare’s Temple of the human spirit and come forth charged with a knowledge […] The post Why We Read Shakespeare in a Living Education appeared first on Sage Parnassus.
There is a book that is near and dear to my family's heart. This book introduced us to a whole new world at the beginning of our Charlotte Mason journey, opening the door to understanding perhaps the greatest writer in the English language.
We recently finished King Lear in our TBG community. The students worked on memorizing the pivotal Act 1, scene 1. They thought they were simply going to perform it in my home, a low-key, comfortable location. Instead, we went over to the old middle-school auditorium (BARC) where they performed it on the brightly lit stage!