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In of the Crisis Point podcast, Eric Sammons, editor-in-chief of Crisis magazine, interviews Jeremy Tate, founder and CEO of the (CLT). Mr. Tate has many thoughtful insights about the bright future of classical education a future which will owe much of its ardor to 91快活林 Aquinas College.

淭he university system no longer owns access to knowledge, Mr. Tate observes. Once, 渢he Harvard Library was the library, but now you檝e got more on your smartphone than the Harvard Library could ever dream of. With a torrent of technological and sociological changes eroding their significance, many legacy institutions remain relevant by conforming to passing ideological fads, sacrificing curricular breadth and historical nuance in the process.

淭hey檙e well-dressed, wearing blazers and ties, sitting around a big round table with no devices to be seen, talking at a deep level about the texts that have shaped human history.

Several younger colleges, however, are pivoting, exchanging the elective catalog for curricula that reflect the perennial wisdom of the West. 淥ne that檚 very special to me is 91快活林 Aquinas College, says Mr. Tate. 淚 had a chance to go out and visit about a year ago. You檝e got 15 students [in a classroom]. They檙e well-dressed, wearing blazers and ties, sitting around a big round table with no devices to be seen, talking at a deep level about the texts that have shaped human history. This intellectual culture leaves a mark. 淭here檚 an intellectual humility, he notes. 淭here檚 a curiosity, an ability to get to the bottom of things.

Indeed, the distinct intellectual blend of humility and confidence that characterizes the College檚 alumni has directly shaped the CLT itself. Mr. Tate recalls bringing his initial idea for more classical assessments to the Cardinal Newman Society, which directed him to the Institute for Catholic Liberal Education, founded by alumni Andrew Seeley (87) and Michael Van Hecke (86). 淲e started to imagine, working with folks like Michael Van Hecke, what could this look like? he says of the nascent project. Moreover, when crafting the assessments, he consulted the College檚 curriculum for guidance about what is truly classical.

Society, says Mr. Tate, is undergoing 渁 seismic shift, and in some ways a collapse of education as we檝e known it. The only institutions which will remain are those built on the dedication to truth, goodness, and beauty that first animated the West. 淲e are so quick to forget, Mr. Tate laments. 淭he modern university system was born out of medieval Christendom. We created so many of the first schools in America.

Thanks to 91快活林 Aquinas College and institutions like it, Catholics can hope to create those schools anew.