In the 1940′s the British author, Dorothy Sayers, wrote an essay entitled “The Lost Tools of Learning.” In it she calls for a return to the application of the seven liberal arts of ancient education, the first three being the “Trivium” – grammar, logic, rhetoric. Miss Sayers also combines the three stages of children’s development to the Trivium. Specifically, she matches what she calls the “Poll-parrot” stage with grammar, “Pert” with logic, and “Poetic” with rhetoric. At Trinity, the founding board members were intrigued with this idea of applying a classical education in a Christian context. Trinity Christian Academy has been committed to implementing this form of education since the school’s inception.
When children are amazed with human discussion we teach them language and grammar. In the grammar school, students sing and clap out history timelines, science facts, Bible verses and rules of grammar. We focus this towards the Kindergarten through 6th grades.
When they are ready to challenge every assumption, we teach them logic. Logic students spend much of their day learning how to present an argument with their teachers and peers. But not just to present an argument but they must be able to argue well. These areas are addressed in 7th and 8th grades.
Rhetoric students have learned the grammar and logic and now must weave these disciplines into attractive speech and writing. We sincerely hope they find this in their high school years by writing reports, giving presentations and getting involved in speech and debate teams.
An excerpt from Doug Wilson’s book , “Recovering the Lost Tools of Learning:”
The last emphasis is rhetoric. We want our students to be able to express clearly everything they learn. As essay in history must be written as clearly as if it were an English paper. An oral presentation in science should be as coherent as possible. It is not enough that the history or science be correct. It must also be expressed well.


