My six year old held a Rubik’s cube in his hand. Turning it slowly, he looked at me. “Mom.
I want to learn how to solve a Rubik’s cube.”

I could tell he was serious.
This was not a whim of a little boy.
I remembered the promise I made to one of his doctors.
“Help him find things that he can be good at. Adaptive sports are fine if that is what he wants, but also invest his time in things like music, history, robotics.”
Dr. Timothy Brei is one of the most celebrated physicians in his field. Dr. Brei and my son have something in
common. They both have Spina
Bifida. The Rubik’s cube seemed to be a
way to keep my promise to Dr. Brei. But I
knew nothing about Rubik’s cubes. How on earth was I going to teach my son how
to solve a Rubik’s cube? The first thing I needed to do was learn to solve a
cube myself.
I used two major tools to help my son solve the Rubik’s
cube. In this post, I’m going to focus on the first tool: The Trivium. I will explain how the second tool, Apprenticeship,
helped us to solve the cube in the next blog post.
I love Classical Education.
I educate my children classically at home, and we are part of a classical
homeschool group that meets once each week called Classical Conversations. When I first started studying Classical
Education thirteen years ago, I thought it was kind of stuffy and dry. Students learn Latin. The memorize declensions. They read old books. It didn’t sound quite as fun as traditional
learning to me. But I have changed my
position on that. Classical education is
not dry. It is rich. And the tools of Classical Education can be
used to learn just about anything. To
show you how versatile the tools of Classical Education are, I am going to
explain how I used the Trivium to learn to solve a Rubik’s cube. (Not quite as stuffy and dry as it sounds,
eh?)
In ancient Greece and Rome, students used the Trivium to
learn new skills. Trivium means “three roads” in Latin.
The three parts (or roads) to the trivium are Grammar, Dialectic, and
Rhetoric. During the Grammar stage,
students memorize definitions and facts, with very little concern to meaning. While
students can work through all the stages, young children naturally fall into
the Grammar stage because they are able to memorize facts without a lot of
effort. Have you ever met a preschooler
that can name all different kinds of dinosaurs?
My five year old loves Pokemon cards.
He can tell me the names of each of the characters on the cards, and he
can remember how much health and damage each one has. (I, however, have no idea what that
means. Nor do I care.) The Grammar of the Trivium, not to be
confused with English Grammar, is the basics of the topic you are studying. Students in the Grammar stage memorize names
and dates in History, math facts in Math; they memorize lists in Science such
as the five kingdoms of living things. They memorize the list of prepositions
for English Grammar. They memorize the states and capitals. Their brains are
wired to memorize facts, so classical educators try to fill their long term
memory with as many good facts as possible.

The final stage of the Trivium is the Rhetoric Stage. This is when you take the skills you have acquired
from the Grammar and Dialectic stage, and you are able to teach what you have
learned. I started a Rubik’s cube solving club that met at my
house. I was ready to help my son learn
to solve a cube. I did use grammar and dialectic stages to help my son learn
the cube, but there is also another tool I used to help him. I will explain how
I used Apprenticeship to teach my son to solve a 3x3 Rubik’s cube in the next blog post.
No comments:
Post a Comment