Liberty
Letters

November 3, 2003
Jefferson, Letter 3
The First
Principle of Higher Education
by Steve Farrell
In my home state, and probably in yours, we
often here about the deplorable state of public
education.
The cure always involves more money, either to
shrink classroom size, to hike administrator's
salaries, to install a few extra computers, or to
build shiny new buildings.
Some states even shovel some of that money back
to the parents in order to force the public schools
to "compete" for those same dollars.
But what if the real cure isn't about money and
gadgets and buildings?
In choosing a path for education and for life,
Thomas Jefferson outlined a course of education for
one Peter Carr over two centuries ago. His
recommendations, by today's standards, are
remarkable.
In a letter from Paris dated August 19, 1785, he
advised the young Peter to "begin a course of
ancient history, reading everything in the original
and not in translations."
- First read Goldsmith's history of Greece
[for] a digested view of that
field
and then take up ancient history in
the detail, reading the following books in the
following order: Herodotus, Thucydides
,Xenophonti s Anabasis, Arrian, Quintus Curtius,
Diodorus Siculus, Justin.
"The next will be of Roman history", says
Jefferson [to include, Livy, Sallust,
Cæsar, Cicero's epistles, Suetonius, Tacitus,
and Gibbon].
After laying that foundation, the youth should
move on to a study modern history.
But this was not all. Greek and Latin poetry
ought to be studied daily. "[Y]ou have read
or will read at school, Virgil, Terence, Horace,
Anacreon, Theocritus, Homer, Euripides, Sophocles",
Jefferson said. "Read also Milton's "Paradise
Lost," Shakespeare , Ossian, Pope's and Swift's
works, in order to form your style in your own
language."
A study of morality was part of the program, as
well. "[Read] Epictetus, Xenophonti s
Memorabilia ; Plato's Socratic dialogues, Cicero's
philosophie s, Antoninus, and Seneca."
And let's not neglect the body.
- In order to assure a certain progress in
this reading, consider what hours you have free
from the school and the exercises of the school.
Give about two of them, every day, to exercise;
for health must not be sacrificed to learning. A
strong body makes the mind strong.
Early to bed, early to rise, was part of the
above, as well as an additional half hour morning
walk first thing in the morning to invigorate the
mind and body for the day ahead.
From what we know about the Jeffersonian model
of education, all of the above would be followed at
the University level with a rigorous study of all
useful sciences, the arts, attendance at religious
seminaries (across the street from every campus),
and after the university, a lifelong commitment to
continuing education.
More importantly, was the purpose for all this
learning.
One must apply knowledge to "the interests of
country
friends
and
[self] -- and in one way only; -- that is,
"with the purest integrity, [and] the most
chaste honor."
And listen to this:
- The defect of these virtues can never be
made up by all the other acquirements of body
and mind.
-
- Make these, then, your first object. Give up
money, give up fame, give up science, give the
earth itself and all it contains, rather than do
an immoral act.
He wasn't kidding. He continued.
- And never suppose, that in any possible
situation, or under any circumstances, it is
best for you to do a dishonorable thing, however
slightly so it may appear to you.
-
- Whenever you are to do a thing, though it
can never be known but to yourself, ask yourself
how you would act were all the world looking at
you, and act accordingly.
If he did this, Jefferson promised the lad, no
matter the perplexity, no matter the odds of
success, the supposed Gordian knot would untie, and
peace of mind would be "[his] in every
moment of life, and in the moment of death."
Could this be the cure to our modern educational
crisis; -- not gold, not gimmicks, not gadgets, but
a need to return to the Jefferson styled classical
education of old, an education in mind and in
morals, that puts love of neighbor, country and
personal integrity first? I suggest that it is.
Bibliography
Albert Ellery Bergh, The Writings of Thomas
Jefferson, Volume 5, pgs. 82-87.
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