Classical Conversations Podcast

Classical Conversations Inc.

  • 50 minutes 24 seconds
    How to Finish Strong When You Want to Quit Homeschooling

    Does homeschooling have you ready to quit? You're not alone — and you're not failing. In this episode of the Everyday Educator podcast, host Lisa Bailey and 7-year Classical Conversations mom DeDe Adetutu get real about the winter doldrums, talk about why finishing strong actually matters, and share the practical strategies — and a little Yoruba wisdom — that have helped their families push through to the finish line. This one is equal parts encouragement and action plan. Lisa Bailey opens by naming what so many homeschool moms feel but rarely say out loud: February is hard. The holidays are over, the calendar looks long, and even families who genuinely love what they do can hit a wall. Her friend's confession — "I just want to quit" — wasn't a crisis. It was completely normal. DeDe Adetutu jumps in with a key insight: the winter doldrums aren't random. They're the predictable aftermath of over-investing in holiday intentionality and under-investing in what comes next. We create the problem by making Christmas extraordinary and leaving January with nothing to look forward to. But she also offers a counter-perspective — maybe that emptiness isn't a problem to fix. Maybe it's rest. Winter isn't dead; it's dormant. And the ram, as DeDe's husband says, takes two steps back before charging forward. The conversation gets practical fast. DeDe shares what her family has developed over seven years of CC: annual photo reviews with the family after Christmas that double as goal-setting sessions, cross-country training that teaches kids what finishing strong feels like in their bodies, inside jokes that double as one-word pep talks, and short interval study sprints that make the final weeks manageable. Lisa adds her own toolkit — 30-minute focused work blocks, purposeful rest days that involve serving others, and the occasional backwards day to break the monotony for younger kids. What You'll Learn • Why the winter doldrums are actually something we create for ourselves — and what to do about it • Why finishing strong matters so much more than just getting to the end • How a senior cross-country runner's wisdom about the hardest part of the race applies to your homeschool right now • The Yoruba proverb DeDe's Nigerian husband shares with their family that reframes what rest is actually for • Practical strategies for beating mid-year burnout: interval study sessions, backwards day, British accent memory work, and more • Why it's okay to grieve unrealistic goals — and how to adjust them without quitting • What a German exchange student's dance move taught DeDe's family about finishing strong • Why seniors struggle to finish and what parents can do to help them stay present • How a plate of Belgian chocolate and a foundations geography lesson became one of the year's best memories • How Candyland might have been designed to teach kids how to handle disappointment

    This episode of Everyday Educator is sponsored by: Summit Ministries

    Do you want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endure, and friends and faith for life? Summit's Student Conferences equip young Christians with the hope, clarity, and confidence they need to follow Jesus boldly in today's world. It's not just about getting apologetics answers. Students learn how to live winsomely and bravely in today's world. Visit summit.org/cc before March 31, 2026, and lock in the early bird rate. Save an additional $250 when you use the code CC26. Want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endures, and friends and faith for life? Grab their spot now at summit.org/cc

    Classical Conversations' new 2026 Product Line

    This April, Classical Conversations is launching an exciting portfolio of new products designed to strengthen math fluency, develop critical reasoning skills, and equip families with practical tools for classical, Christian homeschooling. From flashcard resources and reasoning curriculum to hands-on manipulatives and a foundational parent resource, these releases deepen the classical learning journey for families at every level. Visit ClassicalConversations.com/WhatsNew/ to explore the entire April 2026 product collection and start strengthening your family's classical, Christian education today. Don't miss the special CC Bookstore sale from April 7 - 28!

    31 March 2026, 7:41 pm
  • 32 minutes 41 seconds
    Why a Human Voice Still Matters: Internet Grandpa on Reading Aloud

    You may already recognize his voice. For thousands of Classical Conversations families, Charles Hall — known simply as "Internet Grandpa" — has become one of the most beloved figures in the homeschool community, reading rich living books aloud on YouTube and blessing families he has never met. In this episode of the Everyday Educator, host Kelli Wiltsits down with Mr. Hall to talk about how it all started, what it means to hear a human voice read a story, and what happens when faithful work runs into unexpected obstacles.

    Charles Hall never set out to become Internet Grandpa. It started simply — reading picture books on YouTube so his grandchildren, scattered from Florida to Pittsburgh, could hear his voice. He made the videos unlisted at first, then figured there was no harm in making them public. What followed was something he never anticipated.

    CC families discovered his recordings, and comments began pouring in — parents of struggling readers, moms multitasking through housework, kids making the transition from Foundations into Challenge who needed a warm, steady voice to carry them through books like The Secret Garden and Carry On, Mr. Bowditch. His subscriber count passed the number of friends and family, and Internet Grandpa was born.

    Kelli opens the episode by sharing her own family's story — her daughter found Mr. Hall's recordings at exactly the right moment, helping her step into independence as a learner while her mom worked nearby. It's the kind of testimony that appears again and again in his comment section.

    The conversation turns to why the human voice matters so much. Mr. Hall connects it all the way back to the womb — children hear their parents' voices before they are born, and that bond between voice and love is something no machine can replicate. Jesus, he notes, did most of his ministry through storytelling. People haven't changed much in 2,000 years.

    He closes with a story about his son Christopher — a boy who hated reading, until his dad started leaving him at cliffhangers. One night his wife found Christopher in bed with a flashlight, finishing the chapter himself. That's what Internet Grandpa hopes for every child who hears his voice.

    What You'll Learn:

    - How a grandfather reading Narnia to his kids 40 years ago eventually became a YouTube ministry for thousands

    - Why stories told by a human voice still matter in an age of AI — and what children hear even before they are born

    - How Internet Grandpa's recordings have helped struggling readers, busy moms, and kids transitioning into CC Challenge

    - The cliffhanger trick he used to turn his reluctant reader son into a flashlight-under-the-covers reader

    - How to support, pray for, and stay connected with Internet Grandpa right now

    Resources:

    https://www.youtube.com/@InternetGrandpa

    This episode of Everyday Educator is sponsored by:

    Summit Ministries

    Do you want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endure,

    and friends and faith for life? Summit's Student Conferences equip young Christians with

    the hope, clarity, and confidence they need to follow Jesus boldly in today's world. It's not

    just about getting apologetics answers. Students learn how to live winsomely and bravely in today's world.

    Visit summit.org/cc before March 31, 2026, and lock in the early bird rate. Save an additional $250 when you use the code CC26. Want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endures, and friends and faith for life? Grab their spot now at summit.org/cc

    Timestamps

    00:00 — Welcome and Introduction

    01:06 — How Did Internet Grandpa Begin? The Origin Story

    01:53 — Reading Narnia to His Kids — 40 Years Before YouTube

    02:22 — Recording for Grandkids Far Away and Going Public

    03:05 — How CC Families Discovered Him

    03:29 — Kelly's Personal Story: How Her Daughter Was Blessed by His Recordings

    04:20 — What Drew Him to CC Challenge Books

    06:03 — Early Books: The Secret Garden, Carry On Mr. Bowditch, Number the Stars

    06:43 — When He Realized He Had Become Internet Famous

    07:12 — The Comments That Have Encouraged Him Most

    08:01 — Why Reading Aloud Still Matters: Stories, Hearts, and the Art of Attending

    08:20 — Why Jesus Told Stories — and Why People Haven't Changed

    09:52 — Why a Human Voice Is Different from AI

    10:32 — What Children Hear Before They Are Born

    11:41 — How He Hopes These Recordings Support Parents at Home

    12:24 — Adventures in Odyssey, Car Trips, and Multitasking Moms

    12:46 — What He Hopes Children Remember Years from Now

    13:57 — The Demonetization Challenge: What Happened and What It Means

    15:01 — The Difficult Decisions Demonetization Has Created

    16:50 — Rumble and Patreon: Exploring New Platforms

    19:09 — What the Ideal Platform Would Look Like

    22:04 — How to Support Internet Grandpa Right Now

    24:52 — What He Has Learned Through This Season of Difficulty

    25:36 — Trusting God When the Path Is Unclear

    27:48 — An Encouragement to All CC Families: Cultivate a Love of Books

    28:15 — The Story of His Son Christopher and the Flashlight Under the Covers

    30:06 — Prayer Requests and How to Stay Connected

    31:15 — Where to Find Internet Grandpa: YouTube, Facebook, and CC Connected

    31:50 — Closing Words from Kelly and a Final TTFN from Mr. Hall

    24 March 2026, 5:28 pm
  • 43 minutes 3 seconds
    The Habits Every Homeschool Family Needs with Leigh Bortins

    What if the most important thing you teach your child has nothing to do with curriculum? In this episode of the Everyday Educator podcast, host Emma Bortins sits down with her mother-in-law and Classical Conversations founder Leigh Bortins to discuss the ideas behind her new book, The Habits: Practicing the Art of Grammar. Together they explore how naming, attending, memorizing, expressing, and storytelling build the foundational habits that help children — and homeschool families — truly flourish. If you're a homeschool mom looking for a classical Christian approach to raising lifelong learners, this conversation is for you.

    Leigh opens by sharing how it took her twelve years of homeschooling to truly understand what her husband had been telling her all along — that what children need most is consistency. It wasn't until she had a second set of young boys while her older sons were teenagers that the power of habits became undeniable. The routines she had built into Robert and John made it possible to keep the family functioning; without them, the whole thing would have fallen apart.

    From that personal foundation, the conversation moves into the heart of the book: a framework of five habits — naming, attending, memorizing, expressing, and storytelling — that Leigh calls the building blocks of a grammar education. These aren't abstract academic concepts. They're what every good mother already does instinctively: naming the dog, teaching a toddler not to touch the stove, helping a child memorize where mom will be in Walmart. The point is to recognize these habits, name them, and practice them with intention.

    The episode takes a fascinating turn when Emma asks about AI and technology. Leigh's position is clear: children under 12 don't need screens at all. Not because technology is inherently evil, but because children who never learn to entertain themselves, sit still, or be alone with their thoughts will struggle with self-control for the rest of their lives — with or without technology. The habits of self-governance have to come first.

    The episode closes with Leigh's single most important piece of advice for new homeschoolers: find a mentor. Not a curriculum. Not a method. A person who seems to be doing it well and is willing to let you watch.

    What You'll Learn

    - What the art of grammar actually means — and why it's about far more than memorization

    - The five core habits of the grammar stage: naming, attending, memorizing, expressing, and storytelling

    - Why Leigh says attending is the one habit she'd tell every family to start practicing today

    - How habits shape not just academic ability but character, self-control, and spiritual formation

    - Why parents need to self-assess their own habits before they can effectively pass them on

    - What Leigh thinks about AI and technology — and her recommendation for families with children under 12

    - Why feeling inadequate to homeschool is universal — and why it's not actually the obstacle you think it is

    - How the habits formed in the grammar years show up years later in college anatomy and chemistry courses

    - Where to find Leigh online and which books to read alongside The Habits

    This episode of Everyday Educator is sponsored by:

    Summit Ministries

    Do you want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endure, and friends and faith for life? Summit's Student Conferences equip young Christians with the hope, clarity, and confidence they need to follow Jesus boldly in today's world. It's not just about getting apologetics answers. Students learn how to live winsomely and bravely in today's world. Visit summit.org/cc before March 31, 2026, and lock in the early bird rate. Save an additional $250 when you use the code CC26. Want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endures, and friends and faith for life? Grab their spot now at summit.org/cc

    Timestamps

    00:00 — Welcome and Introduction

    02:22 — Leigh's Reaction to Being Interviewed by Her Daughter-in-Law

    03:10 — What Took So Long to Understand: The Role of Habits in Homeschooling

    04:13 — How a Second Set of Young Boys Changed Everything

    05:14 — What Her Husband Was Saying All Along — and When She Finally Heard It

    06:40 — What Is the Art of Grammar? Beyond Memorization

    07:33 — The Five Habits: Naming, Attending, Memorizing, Expressing, Storytelling

    09:33 — Expressing and Storytelling in Everyday Family Life

    10:19 — What Happens in Families Without Habits

    12:04 — Emma's Daughter and the "Tell Stories, Dance" Moment

    13:49 — It's Not Just What Students Know — It's How They Learn

    15:45 — The One Habit That Distinguishes Flourishing Students: Self-Control

    17:08 — Parents Must Self-Assess First: More Is Caught Than Taught

    18:47 — Sitting on Daddy's Lap: Three Very Different Experiences

    19:50 — Slowing Down in a World That Moves Too Fast

    20:15 — AI, Technology, and Homeschooling with Humans

    21:19 — Leigh's Recommendation: No Screens for Children Under 12

    23:14 — Having the Conversation with Your Kids About Why

    24:15 — How Habits Shape Character, Not Just the Mind

    25:23 — You're Not Being Raised for Yourself — You're Being Raised to Serve

    26:06 — The Story of Jonah's Timeout and What It Revealed About Siblings

    27:15 — The Connection Between Intellectual Habits and Spiritual Formation

    29:09 — How to Cultivate Spiritual Habits at Home: Find a Mentor

    31:27 — There's No Single Answer — Fit the Liturgy to Your Family's Schedule

    31:58 — Encouragement for Parents Who Feel Inadequate to Homeschool

    33:55 — What Second-Generation Homeschoolers Bring to the Table

    37:03 — If You Could Only Start One Habit: Attending

    38:09 — Situational Awareness and Why It Matters for Everything

    40:35 — How Early Habits Prepare Students for Logic, Rhetoric, and College

    41:47 — What CC Students Say When They Call Home from College

    42:32 — Thank You, Closing Thoughts, and Where to Find Leigh

    17 March 2026, 6:24 pm
  • 49 minutes 33 seconds
    Anti-Burnout Memory Master Tips

    Is pushing for Memory Master worth it — and what happens if your child doesn't make it? In this episode of the Everyday Educator podcast, host Amy Jones sits down with veteran CC moms Courtney Bradshaw and Tunrade Schumann to talk about how to challenge your kids with Classical Conversations memory work without overwhelming them or pushing too hard. Whether you're aiming for Memory Master, Subject Master, or just want your child to engage more deeply with the Foundations curriculum, this conversation is full of warm, practical wisdom for every homeschool family.

    Tunrade shares how her family dove headfirst into Memory Master from day one, with all four kids eventually earning the title — and each one also having that one hard year where it didn't quite come together. Those years, she says, turned out to be among the most valuable. Her daughter once went back as a Challenge A student to earn the one cycle she'd missed years earlier, simply because it still mattered to her. Tunrade herself has spent the last two years earning Mom Memory Master alongside her kids, with a third planned as her capstone.

    Courtney offers a beautifully different perspective — her family never completed community Memory Master, but has celebrated Subject Masters, a "Master Swordsman" scripture challenge, and countless informal moments where the content showed up in unexpected ways: a college Western Civ class, a Challenge speech, a paper. She's candid about the seasons of life — including adopting three children mid-journey — that meant mom simply wasn't available, and why that's okay.

    The conversation turns practical in the back half, with both moms sharing specific tips: starting with six weeks of consistent daily review, using CDs and flip books for independent study, leveraging Christmas break to tackle early weeks, pairing up with another Memory Master family for accountability and fun, and tailoring review methods to each child's learning style. Motivation strategies include review game parties, community check-ins, and Tunrade's beloved family tradition: a full week of unlimited screen time after Memory Master — which, she notes, usually loses its charm by day two.

    The episode closes with a reminder that the real reward isn't the blue shirt. It's a child who knows how they learn, trusts their own mind, and isn't afraid of hard things.

    What You'll Learn:

    - The full Memory Master continuum — from Subject Master all the way to the National Memory Master Contest

    - How two experienced CC families approached Memory Master very differently — and both thrived

    - Why the hidden benefits of Memory Master have almost nothing to do with memorization

    - What to do when life gets hard and Memory Master just isn't happening this year

    - Practical, age-by-age tips for making memory work fun (trampolines, hopscotch, hand motions & more)

    - How to use Christmas break strategically to get ahead on proofs

    - Creative ways to celebrate and motivate kids through the February doldrums

    - Why kids who earn Memory Master aren't scared of hard things later in life

    - How Tunrade earned Mom Memory Master — and why Courtney is already eyeing it for her last round

    This episode of Everyday Educator is sponsored by:

    Summit Ministries

    Do you want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endure,

    and friends and faith for life? Summit's Student Conferences equip young Christians with

    the hope, clarity, and confidence they need to follow Jesus boldly in today's world. It's not

    just about getting apologetics answers. Students learn how to live winsomely and bravely in today's world.

    Visit summit.org/cc before March 31, 2026, and lock in the early bird rate. Save an additional $250 when you use the code CC26. Want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endures, and friends and faith for life? Grab their spot now at summit.org/cc

    Timestamps

    00:00 — Welcome & Introduction

    00:22 — Amy's Homeschool Journey & Why This Topic Matters

    00:48 — The Memory Master Continuum: Subject Master to National Contest

    03:39 — Meet Courtney Bradshaw: 12 Years of CC, Academic Advisor & 7 Kids

    06:30 — Meet Tunrade Schumann: 12 Years of CC, Social Media Director & Graduating Her First

    09:18 — What It Means to "Graduate" as a CC Mom

    12:09 — Why the Memory Content Is So Rich (and Funny College Moments)

    13:21 — Tunrade's Family Memory Master Journey: All Four Kids, Every Cycle

    15:09 — Mom Memory Master: When Your Kid Proofs You

    16:15 — The Hard Year Every Child Had — and What They Learned From It

    18:14 — How a Challenge A Student Went Back for the Cycle She Missed

    20:06 — Courtney's Journey: Subject Masters, a Scripture Challenge & Meeting Kids Where They Are

    25:28 — Subject Master Deep Dive: Latin, Geography & Leaning Into What They Love

    28:34 — It's Not All or Nothing: Finding the Right Level for Your Family

    30:33 — Practical Tips: How and When to Start Preparing for Memory Master

    32:05 — Making Memory Work Fun: Trampolines, Hopscotch, Hand Motions & More

    33:09 — Using Christmas Break to Get Ahead on Proofs

    35:39 — Learning Styles: Why What Works for One Child Won't Work for Another

    38:55 — The Proofing Timeline: What to Expect and When

    40:09 — Keeping Kids Motivated Through the February Doldrums

    41:35 — Review Games, Study Dates & Building Friendships Through Memory Master

    44:09 — How Tunrade's Family Celebrates: The Week of Unlimited Screen Time

    45:14 — The Real Reward: Kids Who Know How They Learn and Aren't Scared of Hard Things

    46:33 — Closing Encouragement & Finding Your CC Community

    10 March 2026, 6:50 pm
  • 54 minutes 28 seconds
    Raising Kids Who Don't Deconstruct Their Faith | Alisa Childers

    Is progressive Christianity coming for your kids — and would you even recognize it if it was? In this episode of the Everyday Educator podcast, host Amy Jones and co-host Emma Bortins sit down with author and apologist Alisa Childers to unpack what progressive Christianity actually is, why it appeals to young people, and how Christian homeschool parents can equip their children to stand firm in biblical truth. If you're raising kids in today's cultural climate, this conversation is one you can't afford to miss. Alisa shares her own story of encountering progressive Christianity through a pastor who slowly dismantled core doctrines of the faith, and how that crisis ultimately led her to study apologetics and write Another Gospel. She offers a clear definition of progressive Christianity — not by what it affirms, but by what it denies: substitutionary atonement, the authority of Scripture, the reality of hell, and the exclusivity of Christ. The conversation turns to the younger generation and how moral relativism has become the dominant worldview of Gen Z, making it harder than ever for kids to understand why biblical truth isn't just "your opinion." From there, the hosts dig into practical parenting strategies: why it's not enough to shelter kids, why you should actually show them progressive content and work through it together, and how modeling confidence in your faith can be more powerful than having a perfect answer.

    What You'll Learn: - What progressive Christianity is — and the core doctrines it quietly denies - Why young people are so susceptible to progressive theology and deconstruction - How social media (including random TikTok videos) is influencing your kids' faith - Why the definition of "truth" may be the most important conversation you have with your child - A practical, age-by-age strategy for building spiritual resilience at home - How to show your kids progressive Christian content without it rattling their faith - Why holding a biblical sexual ethic feels different for Gen Z than it did for previous generations - The best apologetics resources for parents and students — including Alisa's new student edition

    00:00 — Introduction & Welcome 00:29 — Introducing Alisa Childers: Author, Apologist & CCM Artist 02:18 — About Another Gospel & the Student Edition 03:09 — Alisa's Personal Story: How She Encountered Progressive Christianity 06:04 — What Is Progressive Christianity? Definitions & Core Denials 11:13 — Tracing the Gospel Arc: Where Progressive Christianity Goes Off the Rails 15:02 — Social Justice, Marxism & What Unites Progressive Christians 16:14 — Is Progressive Christianity Growing? What the Data Doesn't Show 21:21 — The Most Important Word: How You Define "Truth" Changes Everything 24:06 — Insulin or Ice Cream: Teaching Objective vs. Subjective Truth 28:40 — Loving Your Kids' Friends While Holding a Biblical Sexual Ethic 30:03 — Identity, Sexuality & Untying the Knots for the Younger Generation 36:06 — Social Media & Progressive Christianity: Where the Influence Is Coming From 40:10 — Practical Strategies: How to Raise Spiritually Resilient Kids at Home 44:25 — It's Okay Not to Have All the Answers: Modeling Faith Under Pressure 47:36 — Secondary Issues, Wrestling with Scripture & Holding Things in Tension 48:38 — Recommended Resources for Parents & Students 52:01 — Closing Thoughts: The Beauty of the True Gospel

    Resources: https://alisachilders.com/

    This episode of Everyday Educator is sponsored by: Summit Ministries Do you want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endure, and friends and faith for life? Summit's Student Conferences equip young Christians with the hope, clarity, and confidence they need to follow Jesus boldly in today's world. It's not just about getting apologetics answers. Students learn how to live winsomely and bravely in today's world. Visit summit.org/cc before March 31, 2026, and lock in the early bird rate. Save an additional $250 when you use the code CC26. Want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endures, and friends and faith for life? Grab their spot now at summit.org/cc

    3 March 2026, 8:22 pm
  • 50 minutes 1 second
    Why Memorizing Matters: Tips for Homeschool Families

    In this episode of Everyday Educator, host Lisa Bailey is joined by Amy Jones and Ginny Tran to explore why memorizing matters — for your children and for you. From scripture memory to poetry and classical memory work, discover how memorization builds wisdom, shapes character, and hides beauty in your heart for life.

    Amy and Ginny share their earliest memories of memorizing — from singing the books of the Bible at church to reciting Twas the Night Before Christmas by the warmth of a mother's voice — and what those moments reveal about how our brains and hearts learn together. Lisa adds her own stories along the way, including the surprising moment a long-forgotten song came back word-for-word on a Valentine's Day drive.

    But this conversation goes far deeper than memory work checklists. They unpack why the environment of learning matters just as much as the content, how music plants truth in the mind like an earworm that never leaves, and why memorizing whole passages of Scripture — not just isolated verses — can train our children to think alongside Paul, alongside John, and ultimately, alongside God himself.

    Whether you're in the thick of Memory Master season or simply looking for fresh motivation to make memorization meaningful in your homeschool, this episode will leave you inspired to see memory work for what it truly is: not a box to check, but a treasure to hide in the heart.

    This episode of Everyday Educator is sponsored by:

    Summit Ministries

    Do you want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endure,

    and friends and faith for life? Summit's Student Conferences equip young Christians with

    the hope, clarity, and confidence they need to follow Jesus boldly in today's world. It's not

    just about getting apologetics answers. Students learn how to live winsomely and bravely in today's world.

    Visit summit.org/cc before March 31, 2026, and lock in the early bird rate. Save an additional $250 when you use the code CC26. Want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endures, and friends and faith for life? Grab their spot now at summit.org/cc

    The Classical Conversations Alumni Network

    The Classical Conversations Alumni Network is a vibrant community space that builds bridges between CC families and graduates, provides exclusive professional opportunities, and highlights inspirational stories. CC families and graduates will be encouraged and anchored in a supportive community that celebrates the Classical Conversations journey long after Challenge IV.

    Become a member of the Alumni Network today! Learn more by going to https://ccalumni.network/

    24 February 2026, 5:42 pm
  • 37 minutes 34 seconds
    Raising Children of Character: Tips for Homeschool Moms

    What does it really mean to pass on virtue to your children—and how do you do it in the midst of everyday homeschool life? Join host Amy Jones and veteran homeschooler Chelly Barnard for a rich conversation about cultivating moral goodness in your home. Discover how Classical Conversations' Common Topics can help you define and teach virtue, why reading aloud to your kids well into high school matters more than you think, and practical ways to weave biblical truth into daily conversations without being "preachy." Chelly shares wisdom from 25 years of homeschooling experience, emphasizing that virtue isn't about rigid rules—it's about equipping children to flourish according to God's design. Whether you're wrestling with how to train your children's hearts or simply need encouragement that God fills in your deficits as a parent, this episode offers both inspiration and actionable insights for the everyday CC mom.

    This episode of Everyday Educator is sponsored by: Summit Ministries Do you want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endure, and friends and faith for life? Summit's Student Conferences equip young Christians with the hope, clarity, and confidence they need to follow Jesus boldly in today's world. It's not just about getting apologetics answers. Students learn how to live winsomely and bravely in today's world. Visit summit.org/cc before March 31, 2026, and lock in the early bird rate. Save an additional $250 when you use the code CC26. Want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endures, and friends and faith for life? Grab their spot now at summit.org/cc

    "The Habits of a Classical Education" Classical Conversations is releasing "The Habits of a Classical Education"—the long-awaited successor to "The Core." This resource helps you naturally integrate the Five Core Habits into daily life, enabling classical, Christian education where relationships and lifelong learning flourish. Pre-order your signed copy of "The Habits of a Classical Education: Practicing the Art of Grammar" from February 17th through March 14th, 2026, at https://classicalconversationsbooks.com/ – your personally signed book from Leigh will ship in May! https://classicalconversations.com/whatsnew/

    17 February 2026, 5:46 pm
  • 36 minutes 58 seconds
    Ready or Not? Evaluating Your Child's Homeschool Readiness

    Wondering if your child is ready to start Foundations? Join Delise Germond and Lisa Bailey in this episode of Everyday Educator as they discuss practical signs of school readiness for preschoolers and early learners. Discover how to prepare your child for Classical Conversations Foundations, navigate emotional development milestones, and build essential skills like following directions, fine motor development, and independent play. Learn when to start formal learning, how to give constructive feedback as a homeschool parent, and why emotional intelligence matters as much as academic preparation. Whether you're new to homeschooling or evaluating your child's readiness for Foundations, this episode offers encouragement and actionable strategies for starting your homeschool journey with confidence. Perfect for parents of toddlers, preschoolers, and early elementary students considering Classical Conversations or home education.

    What you'll learn: • How to recognize signs your child is ready for formal learning • Ways to develop attention span and help children follow simple directions • Activities that build fine motor skills and handwriting readiness • Strategies for teaching emotional intelligence and naming feelings • How to create routines and expectations together as a family • Why sensory learning and developmental milestones matter • The key differences between homeschool and traditional school readiness

    This episode of Everyday Educator is sponsored by Summit Ministries:

    Do you want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endure, and friends and faith for life? Summit's Student Conferences equip young Christians with the hope, clarity, and confidence they need to follow Jesus boldly in today's world. It's not just about getting apologetics answers. Students learn how to live winsomely and bravely in today's world. Visit summit.org/cc before March 31, 2026, and lock in the early bird rate. Save an additional $250 when you use the code CC26. Want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endures, and friends and faith for life? Grab their spot now at summit.org/cc

    10 February 2026, 6:00 pm
  • 52 minutes 17 seconds
    Tobin, Latin, and a Lot More Fun!

    What if learning Latin could actually be... fun? Join Lisa Bailey and Tobin Duby as they take you on a delightful journey through the world of Parent Practicum and Latin—two things that might sound intimidating but are actually gateways to lifelong learning for your entire family. Tobin shares hilarious behind-the-scenes stories from filming practicums across the country (including the tale of a toddler handing him her yogurt trash), while Lisa opens up about her own "hillbilly belt" moment that brought down the house. But beyond the laughter, discover why practicum is the perfect summer destination for homeschool families seeking community, encouragement, and practical tools. Then dive into Latin—not as a dusty academic subject, but as a mind-expanding adventure that helps children (and parents!) think more clearly, compose better sentences, and even understand Scripture in new ways. From "pater noster" rhyming when "our father" doesn't, to understanding why St. Paul's sentences are so deliciously complex, you'll discover why Latin is relevant for families with kids of all ages. Whether you're brand new to homeschooling or a seasoned veteran, this conversation will inspire you to mark your calendar for this summer's Latin-focused Parent Practicum. Because the best learning happens in community—and it's way more fun than you think!

    This episode of Everyday Educator is sponsored by Summit Ministries:

    Do you want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endure, and friends and faith for life? Summit's Student Conferences equip young Christians with the hope, clarity, and confidence they need to follow Jesus boldly in today's world. It's not just about getting apologetics answers. Students learn how to live winsomely and bravely in today's world. Visit summit.org/cc before March 31, 2026, and lock in the early bird rate. Save an additional $250 when you use the code CC26. Want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endures, and friends and faith for life? Grab their spot now at summit.org/cc

    3 February 2026, 5:00 pm
  • 32 minutes 59 seconds
    Robert Bortins: Multi-Generational Homeschooling and Educational Independence

    Join Delise Germond as she sits down with Robert Bortins, CEO of Classical Conversations and homeschool dad of three, for an engaging conversation about family legacy, educational freedom, and his new book Woke and Weaponized. Robert shares his personal journey from being one of the first 11 students in Classical Conversations to leading the organization for over 13 years. He opens up about the family values that shaped him—hard work, self-discipline, and carrying the family name with honor—and how he's now passing these principles to his own children through practical strategies like job cards instead of allowances and teaching them to work before they play. The conversation dives deep into Robert's extensively researched book, co-authored with award-winning journalist Alex Newman, which traces the historical roots of public education from Robert Owen's "Trinity of Evil" through Prussia to modern-day America. Discover the surprising truth about who's really funding the school choice movement and why educational independence matters now more than ever. Robert also explains what it means to become "anti-fragile" as a family—rejecting consumerism, living within your means, and building resilience that doesn't depend on government systems. Whether you're a homeschooling parent, educator, pastor, or anyone concerned about educational freedom, this conversation offers both warning and hope for raising the next generation to know God and make Him known.

    This episode of Everyday Educator is sponsored by: Woke and Weaponized: How Karl Marx Won the Battle for American Education—And How We Can Win It Back – A new book written by Robert Bortins and Alex Newman. Discover the shocking truth about how current education reform efforts may actually accelerate the destruction of educational freedom. Through meticulous research, Woke and Weaponized traces the philosophical roots of educational corruption from Robert Owen and John Dewey to critical race theory, while offering practical strategies for families ready to pursue genuine educational independence. Join our exclusive list to be notified the moment it becomes available — plus receive special launch updates and insider information. www.WokeAndWeaponized.com

    Summit Ministries

    Do you want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endure, and friends and faith for life? Summit's Student Conferences equip young Christians with the hope, clarity, and confidence they need to follow Jesus boldly in today's world. It's not just about getting apologetics answers. Students learn how to live winsomely and bravely in today's world. Visit summit.org/cc before March 31, 2026, and lock in the early bird rate. Save an additional $250 when you use the code CC26. Want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endures, and friends and faith for life? Grab their spot now at summit.org/cc

    27 January 2026, 7:03 pm
  • 59 minutes
    Identity Formation Through Challenge IV Senior Thesis

    What if the biggest moment in your child's classical education isn't just about academics—but about stepping into their God-given identity? Join host Kelli Wilt and special guest Charity Miner for an in-depth conversation about one of the most transformative experiences in the Challenge years: the senior thesis. Charity, a veteran Challenge IV director and homeschool mom who has shepherded three children through this process, shares the beauty, purpose, and profound impact of this capstone event. Discover why senior thesis is so much more than a research paper—it's a culmination of years of presentations, debates, and mock trials rolled into one powerful moment of defense. Learn how students choose topics that reflect who God made them to be, how parents can support without taking over, and why this experience prepares our children not just for college, but for defending their faith and ideas throughout their entire lives. Whether you're preparing for Challenge IV, currently in the midst of senior thesis, or simply curious about where classical Christian education leads, this episode will encourage and equip you for the journey ahead.

    This episode of Everyday Educator is sponsored by:

    Summit Ministries

    Do you want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endure, and friends and faith for life? Summit's Student Conferences equip young Christians with the hope, clarity, and confidence they need to follow Jesus boldly in today's world. It's not just about getting apologetics answers. Students learn how to live winsomely and bravely in today's world. Visit summit.org/cc before March 31, 2026, and lock in the early bird rate. Save an additional $250 when you use the code CC26. Want your child to have conversations that challenge, encouragement that endures, and friends and faith for life? Grab their spot now at summit.org/cc

    CC Plus Odyssey Program

    The Odyssey Leadership Program is a bridge from the security of the Challenge Program to the bright opportunities of the future! In partnership with Southeastern University, an accredited private, Christian university, The Odyssey Program provides Challenge IV graduates the opportunity to begin their college coursework while participating in a leadership and personal development program, launching them into leadership and life! 2026 Application season is open with limited seats. Learn more by going to https://classicalconversationsplus.com/odyssey-year/

    20 January 2026, 2:00 pm
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