52 min listen
SS #69: Socratic Trialogue (with Renee Shepard!)
FromScholé Sisters: Camaraderie for Classical Homeschooling Mamas
SS #69: Socratic Trialogue (with Renee Shepard!)
FromScholé Sisters: Camaraderie for Classical Homeschooling Mamas
ratings:
Length:
70 minutes
Released:
Apr 3, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Our special guest today is Renee Shepard. Renee has been married for 14 years. She and her husband, who were both homeschooled, are now homeschooling their six children. She is currently finishing her graduate degree in Classical Christian Studies at New Saint Andrews College, where her favorite things to study are theology, Latin, and literature. This episode is a follow up to an episode we did last year called Someone Stole My Socrates. Brandy, Mystie, and Renee discuss a work by Plato called Gorgias. (Brandy likes to call it Gorgeous.) Whatever you call it, it’s a Socratic dialogue. We decided that if we want to know what Socratic discussion is all about, we should go straight to the source. It’s great fun! *** Sign up for our 30-60-90 planning session! Quarantine got you down? It’s not too late to check out or 30-60-90 planning session from last weekend. Just click here to register. This will send you the planning pages and the replay to watch. We’ll help pull you out of your slump so that you are faithful and fruitful during these admittedly weird times. *** Don’t forget to download this episode's Your Scholé Sheet to think through and apply the ideas from this episode, then bring your thoughts into the Sistership and join the conversation happening there. Click here to download your copy for free. *** Click here to get the show notes for today's episode and download Your Scholé Sheet. Click here to join the Sistership. Don't forget to find us on Facebook! Click here to follow us on Instagram!
Released:
Apr 3, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Ep 011: Will the REAL Multum Non Multa Please Stand Up?: On today’s show, Mystie and Brandy discuss the ancient Latin motto multum non multa – meaning, much not many. Applied to education, and somehow misapplied to education, we chat about who used the motto in reference to education, what they... by Scholé Sisters: Camaraderie for Classical Homeschooling Mamas