A True Good Beautiful Life

A True Good Beautiful LifeA True Good Beautiful LifeA True Good Beautiful Life

A True Good Beautiful Life

A True Good Beautiful LifeA True Good Beautiful LifeA True Good Beautiful Life
  • Home
  • Episodes
    • E1- True, Good, Beautiful
    • E2 - Charlotte Mason
    • E3 - 20 Principles
    • E4 - Edu. is Atmosphere
    • E5 - Edu. is a Discipline
    • E6 - Education is a Life
    • E7 - Knowledge of God
    • E8 - Knowledge of Man
    • E9- Knowledge of Universe
    • E10 - Leisure + Liturgies
    • E11 - Flower Farm
    • E12 - Literary Genres
    • E13 - Houseplants + Dance
    • E14 - The Common Arts
    • E15 - Memory + History
    • E16 - Special Needs
    • E17 - Grand Canyon
    • E18 - 7 Lessons
    • E19- World Travel
    • E 20 - History of Advent
    • E21 - A Christmas Carol
    • E22 - The World's a Stage
    • E 23 The Love of Latin
    • E 24 - Birds
    • E 25 - Dante & Narration
    • E-26 Cultivating Writers
    • E27 - Jane Eyre Book Chat
    • E28-Growing Hope & Garden
    • E29- Plutarch & Service
    • E30- Books, Chess & Legos
    • E31- AHG & Valley Forge
    • E32- Reading C. S. Lewis
    • E33-Common Arts Education
    • E34- Tolkien & Fantasy
    • E35 - Studying the Bible
    • E36- Disability in School
    • E37-Spotting Dyslexia
    • E38-Human Flourishing
    • E39-Jane Austen Book Chat
    • E40-Jane Austen Chat, Pt2
    • E41-Poetry & Sonnets
    • E42-Chesterton's Ballad
    • E42-Recovering Schole
  • Favorite Resources
    • Books
  • Field Trips
    • Philly Museum of Art
    • Lost World Caverns
  • Courses
    • For Parents & Teachers
    • For Students
  • More
    • Home
    • Episodes
      • E1- True, Good, Beautiful
      • E2 - Charlotte Mason
      • E3 - 20 Principles
      • E4 - Edu. is Atmosphere
      • E5 - Edu. is a Discipline
      • E6 - Education is a Life
      • E7 - Knowledge of God
      • E8 - Knowledge of Man
      • E9- Knowledge of Universe
      • E10 - Leisure + Liturgies
      • E11 - Flower Farm
      • E12 - Literary Genres
      • E13 - Houseplants + Dance
      • E14 - The Common Arts
      • E15 - Memory + History
      • E16 - Special Needs
      • E17 - Grand Canyon
      • E18 - 7 Lessons
      • E19- World Travel
      • E 20 - History of Advent
      • E21 - A Christmas Carol
      • E22 - The World's a Stage
      • E 23 The Love of Latin
      • E 24 - Birds
      • E 25 - Dante & Narration
      • E-26 Cultivating Writers
      • E27 - Jane Eyre Book Chat
      • E28-Growing Hope & Garden
      • E29- Plutarch & Service
      • E30- Books, Chess & Legos
      • E31- AHG & Valley Forge
      • E32- Reading C. S. Lewis
      • E33-Common Arts Education
      • E34- Tolkien & Fantasy
      • E35 - Studying the Bible
      • E36- Disability in School
      • E37-Spotting Dyslexia
      • E38-Human Flourishing
      • E39-Jane Austen Book Chat
      • E40-Jane Austen Chat, Pt2
      • E41-Poetry & Sonnets
      • E42-Chesterton's Ballad
      • E42-Recovering Schole
    • Favorite Resources
      • Books
    • Field Trips
      • Philly Museum of Art
      • Lost World Caverns
    • Courses
      • For Parents & Teachers
      • For Students
  • Home
  • Episodes
    • E1- True, Good, Beautiful
    • E2 - Charlotte Mason
    • E3 - 20 Principles
    • E4 - Edu. is Atmosphere
    • E5 - Edu. is a Discipline
    • E6 - Education is a Life
    • E7 - Knowledge of God
    • E8 - Knowledge of Man
    • E9- Knowledge of Universe
    • E10 - Leisure + Liturgies
    • E11 - Flower Farm
    • E12 - Literary Genres
    • E13 - Houseplants + Dance
    • E14 - The Common Arts
    • E15 - Memory + History
    • E16 - Special Needs
    • E17 - Grand Canyon
    • E18 - 7 Lessons
    • E19- World Travel
    • E 20 - History of Advent
    • E21 - A Christmas Carol
    • E22 - The World's a Stage
    • E 23 The Love of Latin
    • E 24 - Birds
    • E 25 - Dante & Narration
    • E-26 Cultivating Writers
    • E27 - Jane Eyre Book Chat
    • E28-Growing Hope & Garden
    • E29- Plutarch & Service
    • E30- Books, Chess & Legos
    • E31- AHG & Valley Forge
    • E32- Reading C. S. Lewis
    • E33-Common Arts Education
    • E34- Tolkien & Fantasy
    • E35 - Studying the Bible
    • E36- Disability in School
    • E37-Spotting Dyslexia
    • E38-Human Flourishing
    • E39-Jane Austen Book Chat
    • E40-Jane Austen Chat, Pt2
    • E41-Poetry & Sonnets
    • E42-Chesterton's Ballad
    • E42-Recovering Schole
  • Favorite Resources
    • Books
  • Field Trips
    • Philly Museum of Art
    • Lost World Caverns
  • Courses
    • For Parents & Teachers
    • For Students

Citizenship with Plutarch & Service

This Week's Special Guests are . . .

Rachel Lebowitz

Carol & Curt Hoke

Carol & Curt Hoke

Rachel Lebowitz is the owner of A Charlotte Mason Plenary, an expert on the CM method and philosophy, an Educational Consultant, a speaker, and an author. She has always used the Charlotte Mason method to homeschool both her kiddos from preschool through high school.

Her homeschool philosophy can be summed up in two words: Your Way. She u

Rachel Lebowitz is the owner of A Charlotte Mason Plenary, an expert on the CM method and philosophy, an Educational Consultant, a speaker, and an author. She has always used the Charlotte Mason method to homeschool both her kiddos from preschool through high school.

Her homeschool philosophy can be summed up in two words: Your Way. She unabashedly reminds parents that Charlotte’s philosophy is a method, not a system, and that it should be adapted to uniquely fit your family.

Learn how the “Charlotte Mason Your Way” approach can give you a homeschool that fits your family and your life. Learn more at A Charlotte Mason Plenary.

Carol & Curt Hoke

Carol & Curt Hoke

Carol & Curt Hoke

 Curt and Carol Hoke live in Elverson, PA. They have three adult children and three grandsons. Their oldest child, Cindy, lives near Columbus, OH with her husband and three boys. Their other two children, Abby and Jesse, live and work in the Elverson area.


Curt grew up in western Pennsylvania and attended Cedarville University where he met

 Curt and Carol Hoke live in Elverson, PA. They have three adult children and three grandsons. Their oldest child, Cindy, lives near Columbus, OH with her husband and three boys. Their other two children, Abby and Jesse, live and work in the Elverson area.


Curt grew up in western Pennsylvania and attended Cedarville University where he met Carol. He graduated 1983 with a B.A. in mathematics and now works as the office manager for Stoltzfus Enterprises, Ltd., a home builder. He enjoys the picking and fiddling of bluegrass gospel music and can often be seen dragging a family member or hapless friend along to a concert.


Carol grew up here in Elverson, earned her undergraduate degree from CU in 1982 and now holds M.Ed. from West Chester University. She teaches 1st – 4th graders in a one-room schoolhouse environment in her home. Her hobbies include reading, women's Bible studies, pickleball and taking day trips with Curt during her off-season in the summer.


               Together, the Hokes love grandparenthood, especially when their three grandsons visit in what has become known as "Nana Camp." They love serving the Lord at their church, Brick Lane Community Church in Elverson, where Curt is an elder. They also lead the middle-school group at one of the annual Joni & Friends Family Retreats.

On The Episode

Show Notes

 If you were asked to name a famous Roman leader, you might jump in and call out Julius Caesar or Ceasar Agustus. If you were asked to name a famous Egyptian leader, you might pause for a moment and then recall King Tutankhamun, Cleopatra, Queen Nerfertiti, or maybe even Rameses II. If you were asked to name a famous Greek leader, you might draw a blank. Greek leader, you say? Do philosophers count? I can do some of those!


But if you haven’t studied Ancient History or watched movies set in the Classical Age, you may hear crickets chirping in the room. But what if I said, “Alexander the Great?” Ahhh, yes, that name sounds familiar. What about Leonidas? Oh, wasn’t he in the movie, “The 300?” Yes. 


How about Pericles? (chirp, chirp, chirp, chirp) No? Nothing ringing a bell? Well, you’re not alone. I for one had no idea who he was until I prepared for this episode on Plutarch and his collection of Greek and Roman biographies, technically known as the Lives of Famous Greeks and Romans, or known more famously as Plutarch’s Lives.


You may not have even heard of the name Plutarch, which I would claim the same up until a few years ago when I began learning about British educator Charlotte Mason, who made the study of Plutarch’s Lives an indispensable subject in her schools’ curriculums. 


Today, I am excited to have back on the show Rachel Lebowitz of a Charlotte Mason Plenary. One of her passions is teaching Plutarch and so in the first part of the hour we are going to discuss who this Greek historian and philosopher was and why his name should be familiar to us today as it was centuries ago. For the second half of the hour, I have Curt and Carol Hoke, a lovely couple who will inform us on ways in which we can take some of the goals of Citizenship, like cultivating character and serving one another, and apply them to our lives today.


Favorite Resources:

  • The Annotated Plutarch Series and Picture Studies by Rachel Lebowitz of A Charlotte Mason Plenary
  • A Philosophy of Education: Annotated Edition by Charlotte Mason and Rachel Lebowitz
  • Home Education: Annotated Edition by Charlotte Mason and Rachel Lebowitz
  • Vol. 4: Ourselves by Charlotte Mason
  • Stories From the History of Rome by Emily Beesly
  • The Stuff They Left Behind in the Days of Ancient Greece by Simply Charlotte Mason
  • The Stuff They Left Behind in the Days of Ancient Rome by Simply Charlotte Mason
  • Joni and Friends ministry
  • Volunteer at a Retreat or Getaway with Joni and Friends
  • Queen for a Day hosted by Brick Lane Community Church, Elverson, PA

Commonplace Quotes

 "The object of children’s literary studies is not to give them precise information as to who wrote what in the reign of whom? - but to give them a sense of the spaciousness of the days, not only of great Elizabeth, but of all those times of which poets, historians and the makers of tales, have left us living pictures. In such ways the children secure, not the sort of information which is of little cultural value, but wide spaces wherein imagination may take those holiday excursions deprived of which life is dreary; judgment, too, will turn over these folios of the mind and arrive at fairly just decisions about a given strike, the questions of Poland, Undian Unrest. Every man is called upon to be a statesman seeing that every man and woman, too, has a share in the government of the country; but statesmanship requires imaginative conceptions, formed upon pretty wide reading and some familiarity with historical precedents.” - Charlotte Mason, Vol. 6: A Philosophy of Education, p. 184-185


“Plutarch shows us that it is the small decisions in a man’s life that make up his character. We then get to see the consequences of those decisions. Plutarch does not judge for us. He lays the man’s life before us and we are left to judge. It truly is a remarkable way to study character and morality.” - Rachel Lebowitz, "Preface" to the Annotated Plutarch Series: Pericles


"Though you have not seen Him, you love Him, though you do not now see Him, you believe in Him and rejoice with joy that is inexpressible and filled with glory, obtaining the outcome of your faith, the salvation of your souls." -1 Peter 1:8-9


". . . give a child a single valuable idea, and you have done more for his education than if you had laid upon his mind the burden of bushels of information . . . " - Charlotte Mason, Volume 1: Home Education, p. 174

Application

 

  1. Consider exploring Citizenship in your homeschool or classroom by adding a study of Plutarch's Lives, Shakespeare's plays, Bible reading, and understanding how the government works.
  2. Discuss with your children or students how they can participate in some kind of service project, local long-term service opportunities, or mission trips.
  3. Begin reading through Charlotte Mason's Volume 4: Ourselves with your middle/high schooler and be ready for some great discussions!


Copyright © 2025 A True Good Beautiful Life - All Rights Reserved.

Powered by

This website uses cookies.

We use cookies to analyze website traffic and optimize your website experience. By accepting our use of cookies, your data will be aggregated with all other user data.

Accept