Certificate of Classical Learning

The Braniff Graduate School of Liberal Arts offers the following Classical Education programs: aMaster of Arts in Humanities with Classical Education Concentration and Certificate of Classical Learning. Each of these options includes a required core with additional flexibility in curriculum design so that you can customize a program of study appropriate to your personal, professional, and intellectual goals. Students consult with their academic adviser to map out a program of study.

For descriptions of the courses listed here, and the typical two-year schedule, refer to this webpage.

Certificate in Classical Learning - 18 credit hours

 

Nine credit hours of graduate-level courses are required. The following courses comprise the “core” of the Master of Arts in Humanities with Classical Education Concentration. Each course is three credit hours. 

  • Trivium
  • Quadrivium
  • Philosophy of Education

Nine credit hours of graduate-level elective courses from across the disciplines may be chosen. These include, but are not limited to, the following courses.  Most courses are three credit hours, but sometimes one- and two-credit courses are offered.  In addition, the program regularly offers one-credit pass/fail seminars on targeted practical questions in education. Students may take this seminar up to three times.

  • Courses crafted specifically for our program in classical education, such as Master Teachers in the Western Tradition, History of Liberal Arts Education, Ancient Epics, Plato and Socratic Conversation, Augustine the Teacher, Aquinas on the Virtues, Tolkien as Teacher, The Inklings, Teaching Great American Speeches, Writing as Imitation, Teaching Classical Children’s Literature, Argumentation, Writing as Imitation, Roman Empire and Western Culture, etc. 
  • With the graduate director’s approval, students may complete pertinent graduate-level courses from a variety of fields, including art, classics, drama, economics, education, English and other European literary traditions (French, German, Italian, or Spanish), history, politics, psychology, philosophy, and theology.
  • Practicum (apprenticeship) courses: Among their elective credit hours, students may complete one such one-to-three-credit practicum course per semester at a local classical school for a combined total of at most nine credit hours.

Humanities Graduate Program

The Master of Arts in Humanities with Classical Education Concentration and the Certificate of Classical Learning are part of the Humanities Graduate Program. This 36 credit hour degree allows students to design their own personalized curriculum around a core of four special courses devoted to the reading of seminal works of Western thought. To this core, courses are added according to interest, either in one or two concentrations, or in one or two historical periods, for a deep and broad educational foundation.