2 04, 2025

It’s “No ‘Bro’ April”

By |2025-04-02T18:41:40-04:00April 2, 2025|School life|Comments Off on It’s “No ‘Bro’ April”

It's "No 'Bro' April" in the logic and rhetoric schools at DVCS. What, you ask, is that? Good question! To answer, I've enlisted Chat GPT to help me (and by "help me" I mean do it for me) create an advertisement for "No 'Bro' April." Here it is: This April, drop the "bro" and level up your vocab! No "bro," no "brother," no "brosef"—you get the idea. Get creative. Find new ways to say anything. Challenge yourself. Who needs "bro" when you’ve got a whole dictionary? Join the movement, and let's talk smarter this [...]

5 02, 2025

Education and DVCS School Culture

By |2025-02-10T14:51:49-05:00February 5, 2025|Academics|Comments Off on Education and DVCS School Culture

The following remarks were delivered at the State of the School meeting on February 3, 2025. Romans 12:2; Romans 13:9-10 When the modern classical Christian school movement began in the early 1980s, it aimed to recover something valuable that had been lost in the modern world. Classical Christian Education (CCE) was a critique not only of public schools but also of traditional Christian education, which at that time (and still, to some extent, today) had a reputation for being academically weak. Christians had focused mainly on personal piety, often at the expense of engaging [...]

17 01, 2023

On Science, Truth, and Encountering God

By |2024-08-31T13:30:52-04:00January 17, 2023|Podcast|Comments Off on On Science, Truth, and Encountering God

How do we know God through reason, and how do we see his presence in nature? Seniors at DVCS grapple with these questions during a course in natural theology taught by Dr. Nicholas DiDonato. Dr. DiDonato joins the podcast to discuss these questions as well as perspectives on science and truth, types of reasoning, approaches to teaching difficult texts, and more.  

26 10, 2022

Why Is Celebrating the Reformation Important?

By |2024-08-31T13:35:41-04:00October 26, 2022|Podcast|Comments Off on Why Is Celebrating the Reformation Important?

DVCS Head of School Anthony Urti and language and theology teacher Michael Lynch discuss the significance of the Reformation, which DVCS marks each year with a day of celebration. The following music was used for this media project:Music: Freedom by Alexander NakaradaFree download: https://filmmusic.io/song/4881-freedomLicense (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-licenseArtist website: https://www.serpentsoundstudios.com/

11 10, 2022

On Learning and Teaching Literature

By |2024-08-31T13:37:04-04:00October 11, 2022|Podcast|Comments Off on On Learning and Teaching Literature

DVCS Head of School Anthony Urti and literature teacher Stephen Rippon discuss various literary works, the art of commonplacing, and the importance of learning alongside and from students. The following music was used for this media project:Music: Freedom by Alexander NakaradaFree download: https://filmmusic.io/song/4881-freedomLicense (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-licenseArtist website: https://www.serpentsoundstudios.com/

11 07, 2022

Meet Mrs. Kandra Bellanca, DVCS Art Teacher

By |2024-08-31T13:39:11-04:00July 11, 2022|Faculty & Staff|Comments Off on Meet Mrs. Kandra Bellanca, DVCS Art Teacher

Mrs. Kandra Bellanca will begin teaching art and aesthetics at DVCS this fall. Read on to learn more about her experience with art as well as her passion for classical education! Bellanca enjoyed drawing and taking art classes from a young age. While in high school, she wanted to study film, but after reading a book about film school that advised majoring in liberal arts first, she enrolled as an art major at Baylor University, which offered liberal arts degrees. She later decided to transfer to art school and graduated from the Maryland Institute College [...]

26 10, 2021

Gratitude: A Uniquely Christian Paradox

By |2024-08-31T13:55:34-04:00October 26, 2021|Core Values|Comments Off on Gratitude: A Uniquely Christian Paradox

By Ms. Viviana Marshall It has been asserted that gratitude is the most foundational of virtues. It has also been asserted that gratitude is, at best, a weakness. These two statements seem to hold each other in locked grip, completely at odds. Their opposition is only exaggerated when you learn that the former is argued by A. W. Tozer and Marcus Tullius Cicero and that the latter is argued by Aristotle and Joseph Stalin. But what if both assertions could be true? What if gratitude is as much of a virtuous premise as it is [...]

18 10, 2021

Joy: Psalm 16 and Learning at DVCS

By |2024-08-31T13:54:50-04:00October 18, 2021|Core Values|Comments Off on Joy: Psalm 16 and Learning at DVCS

By Mrs. Jennifer Walker You make known to me the path of life; in your presence there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore. Ps. 16:11 ESV In this psalm, David acknowledges that authentic, abundant, meaningful, and deep joy is futile apart from the presence of the Creator. He sets the Lord always before him and praises the Lord as his “chosen portion” in whom he has a “beautiful inheritance,” “counsel,” and “instruction.” David concludes that surely this is the reason his heart is glad and his whole being rejoices. This [...]

8 10, 2021

The Wisdom of God: A Brief Introduction

By |2024-08-31T13:53:56-04:00October 8, 2021|Core Values|Comments Off on The Wisdom of God: A Brief Introduction

By Dr. Nicholas DiDonato O Lord, how manifold are your works!In wisdom have you made them all.Psalm 104:24 “I pity the fool!” While not as eloquent as Proverbs, Mr. T nevertheless makes the point: foolishness, folly, and those who embrace them, are to be pitied. Yet, even the great Mr. T only reaches the halfway point: it is not enough simply to avoid the life of the fool, but one must follow the path of wisdom. And what is at the end of that path? Where does that path lead? In the Christian tradition, and [...]

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