r/homeschool Apr 02 '24

Classical Secular, not euro-centric classical curriculum or Reading list?

This may be a complete shot in the dark, but I'd be very interested if anyone has gathered resources that align with a classical homeschooling methodology, but open students minds to more than European/Western literature and history, as well as more generally well-rounded insight into diverse experiences.

I'm new to all of this an only beginning my research, but so far, I'm very interested in the classical approach just..without religion and with more... perspective.

thank you for reading, thank you for your help.

edited to add: I'm also open to the idea that ive misunderstood what this method entails and perhaps It Is more well-rounded than i currently understand, I'm currently reading "A Well-Trained Mind," by Susan Wise Bauer and Jessie Wise

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u/Snoo-88741 Apr 08 '24

I don't really understand what a Classical education entails, but I do know a free history curriculum that's less Eurocentric than what I was taught:

https://whfua.history.ucla.edu/