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Classes

I teach individuals and small groups in-person and via Skype.

Here are some of my favorite topics, but, of course, I love to create new courses, so please let me know what you might like to see in the days to come.

Great People – why study great people?

benjaminfranklindiscoverselectricity

Ben Franklin, Super Man

The big questions:
How did a printer’s apprentice educate himself and become a successful business and political leader, creator of the first public library in the US, author, scientist, and diplomat?

The content:

We will read selections from Franklin’s Autobiography and Poor Richard’s Almanac that help us to understand how to emulate his love of life and learning.
The skills and activities:

Creative reading, clear thinking, dynamic writing and journaling, drawing.

Gandhi

Gandhi

The big questions:

How did Gandhi become, well, Gandhi?  What was his personal and spiritual path to such amazing moral and political leadership?  How might we convert this knowledge into wisdom for living our own lives?  Why would an intelligent, sane man shoot one of the greatest men who has ever lived?

The content:

Gandhi An Autobiography: The Story of My Experiments With Truth, Godse’s Deposition/Confession Essay.

The skills and activities:

Deep reading, walking, discussion, exercises in voluntary simplicity, journaling.

Thomas Jefferson

The big questions:

What in Thomas Jefferson’s life formed him into such an extraordinarily influential thinker, writer, and inventor? Would it be possible for Jefferson to reach the same heights in today’s world?  What would make this extraordinary outcome more likely in today’s world?  Less likely?  What can we do about this in our own lives?

The content:

Selected letters and writings from the heart and mind of Thomas Jefferson.

The skills and activities:

Creative reading,  letter writing, journaling, drawing our own inventions or homes.

Emerson and Thoreau

The big questions:

How shall we live? What can a couple of Transcendentalists from the early 1800′s tell us about our lives today?  What are Transcendentalists and what are they transcending?  What should we work on today?  How should we relate to others today?  How can we possibly relate to others who lived long ago?

The content:

Selections from Emerson’s essays “Self-Reliance” and “History” and Thoreau’s “Walden”

The skills and activities:

Creative reading, clear thinking, lively discussion, walking, voluntary simplicity exercises.

It is chiefly through books that we enjoy the intercourse with superior minds… In the best books, great men talk to us, give us their most previous thought, and pour their souls into ours. God be thanked for books. – William Ellery Channing

Reading, Thinking, Writing and Life Skills

Rites of passage with Joseph Conrad

The big questions:
How do we “come of age”?  Can the process be chosen or must it be forced upon us?  What do we gain by engaging in the process actively?  Learn about coming of age in Joseph Conrad’s adventurous world on the high seas.   This class will focus on reading skills, drawing, and envisioning our own lives as acts of creation.
The content:
We will read Conrad’s high-seas adventure stories “Youth” and “The Secret Sharer” while we plot adventures of our own!
The skills and activities:
Creative reading, clear thinking, dynamic writing and journaling, drawing.

Discovering Self in E.M. Forster’s A Room with a View
Lucy

The big questions:
How do we protect and grow our positive, creative sense of self amidst the waves of popular culture today?  How do we make choices that are uniquely our own amidst societal and family pressures?
The content:
Our literary companion for this adventure will be Miss Lucy Honeychurch from E. M. Forsters, A Room with a View.
The skills and activities:
Creative reading, clear thinking, creative writing and journaling, drawing.

Digital Photography – A Date With Your CameraHidden Treasure

The big questions:
How do I use this camera to its full creative potential?
How do I engage my own creativity to find and capture more moving, more beautiful images?
The content:
You, your camera, readings on perception, your world.
The skills and activities:
Walking, seeing the world afresh, perception exercises, capturing the seen and unseen with our cameras, journaling.


Writing Intensive: Letting ideas flow onto paper

The big questions:

Why can we speak so freely but freeze before a blank page?  How can we warm up to writing freely and comfortably, pouring your heart and mind onto the page?

The content:

Will be of our own creation!

The skills and activities:

Walking to activate the mind and imagination, writing exercises to reconnect heart, mind, and hand.  Maybe even some drawing to heighten our observational sensitivities.

Laughing at Life

The big questions:

What makes writing funny?  How can everyday occurences become hilarious stories?  What in a person lets them create a laugh riot out of what thousands of others simply endured?

The content:

Mark Twain’s Roughing It (Enriched Classic Series) which tells the tale of his trip west from Missouri to the gold country of California.

The skills and activities:

Deep reading, finding what makes us laugh, writing our own humorous takes on the situations and characters we meet each day.


Moving Modern Tales

The Book Thief

The big questions:

How can reading literature help us even when Death is all around us?  What if our personal values conflict with those popular around us?  Are we humans beautifully good or brutally bad?

The content:

The Book Thief by Markus Zusak  A moving tale of a young girl’s life inside Nazi Germany during WWII.  We will dive deeply into this page-turner of a book written for young people but moving for any reader with a beating heart.  An amazing fictive feat!

The skills and activities:

Walking, deep reading, lively discussion, inner picturing and drawing to heighten imagination and reading enjoyment.

Adventure

A Time of Gifts: From London to Constantinople on Foot

The big questions:

How can a young person step out into the world in a positive, life-affirming way? What happens inside us when we travel?  How do we savor every drop of joyful learning and living from our travel experiences?

The content:

Patrick Leigh Fermor’s A Time of Gifts: From London to Constantinople on Foot – Walking through the Netherlands, Germany, and Austria in 1933 with the most extraordinary young man on this amazing adventure.

The skills and activities:  Creative reading, walking, journey/pilgrimage planning,  drawing, lively discussion, map reading, orienteering.

Ill Met by Moonlight

The big questions:

What makes a mission impossible possible?  Is there anything in this world that can connect even sworn enemies in the depth of war?

The content:

Ill Met by Moonlight by W. Stanley Moss - British operatives have kidnapped a German general. Can these gentlemen soldiers smuggle him off the island before they are captured by thousands of Nazi soldiers?  A true, completely engrossing story.  Not glorifying of killing or brutality in any way, therefore in adventure.

The skills and activities:

Creative reading, lively discussion, map reading and orienteering.

First Person Shooter: Literature from the Front Lines (WWI and II)

The big questions:

When the firefight ends, some soldiers settle into their muddy dugouts and pull out pen and paper.  What did they write?  How do these veteran writers portray warfare?  How is their portrayal different from the portrayals in today’s popular movies and games?  How do we turn this knowledge into actionable wisdom?

The content:

Selected poems and novel passages from Brooke, Sassoon, Graves, Ledig.

The skills and activities:

Creative reading, walking, clear thinking,  journaling,  and some drawing.

Next step:

Contact us to discuss your questions, interests, and scheduling.