The Headmaster’s Perspective
Welcome to Ridgeview
Ridgeview Classical Schools, above all else, offers an experience as much as an education. We are fortunate to be situated along the Front Range in Fort Collins, Colorado, and we have endeavored to make the most of our location and the talented people it attracts. We take pride in cultivating curious minds and resilient spirits through a classical liberal arts education and the Socratic method. Our mission is to develop students holistically, fostering intellectual rigor, moral character, and a deep appreciation for the adventures to be found in the great books and in our native state.
At the heart of our approach is a commitment to timeless principles and texts. Our curriculum emphasizes critical thinking, articulate communication, and an unparalleled engagement with literature, history, mathematics, and the sciences. We believe that an appeal to wonder and curiosity inspires students to ask profound questions and seek Truth, Goodness, and Beauty with honesty, courage, and humility.
The school harnesses the breathtaking Colorado landscape to enrich our students’ experiences. Our rigorous outdoor program challenges students physically and mentally, develops lifelong friendships, perseverance, and an enduring connection to nature. From hiking in the Rockies to studying ecology in our backyard, students discover the joys of adventuring together and the value of stewardship.
We nurture the whole person—mind, body, and spirit. Our dedicated faculty guide students to grow not only as intelligent citizens but also as compassionate, principled individuals ready to lead and serve. By blending classicism with alpinism and combining it with a virtue-based character education, we prepare students to thrive in and adapt to an ever-changing world while remaining grounded in enduring values.
I invite you to explore our website, visit our campus, and join our community. Together, with family and school aligned, every student can be empowered to reach his or her fullest potential.
Warm regards,
Mr. Derek Anderson, Headmaster
On Health and Wellness
There is almost nothing that unsettles the mind quite so badly as disease. We can generally imagine ways in which to defend ourselves against any number of enemies, but the invisibility of a bacteria, virus, or prion combined with the sense that merely going about our day-to-day lives invariably puts us at risk of contracting something from which we might not recover, can nearly undo us. Adding to these wholly natural worries and anxieties is an untrustworthy news media fear mongering one moment and downplaying concerns the next, making it nearly impossible to discern the truth and what our reactions to an evolving situation ought to be. Therefore, we can be forgiven for vacillating between paranoia and complacency. Where does the balance lie? How can we strike a prudent mean that allows us to be vigilant in a practical way?
A Tour, Part III
American history has always been given pride of place within the curriculum at Ridgeview. Our country’s culture and history are given this sort of attention because whatever else our students may go on to become, very nearly all of them will go on to become American citizens.
A Tour, Part II
Few who walk into Ridgeview for the first time in 2020 could imagine that the building began life as a church in 1978. Entering through the front doors, students see the Hoplite logo inlaid in the flooring. The Hoplite was the mascot chosen by Ridgeview students in 2001.
A Tour: Part I
Nevertheless, efforts have been made for our building to tell our story: our purpose, ambitions, and values. In addressing the importance of architecture, the French writer Alain de Botton noted that, “Belief in the significance of architecture is premised on the notion that we are, for better or for worse, different people in different places—and on the conviction that it is architecture’s task to render vivid to us who we might ideally be.”
Students of the Quarter
At the end of each quarter the faculty and administration recognize one middle-school and one high-school student to honor at an awards assembly. Without further explanation, this sounds like an unexceptional occurrence—the kind of mundanity one has come to expect from education as consolation.
Martin Luther King Jr. Day
Set against this backdrop, Martin Luther King, Jr. enters the national consciousness, most notably with his 1963 I Have a Dream speech at the Lincoln Memorial. What we recognize today is not simply the man, but the long train of abuses that he stood against.
Post-Solstice Solace
We hope you will join us on January 18th as we host our fifth annual Post-Solstice Solace at High Peak Camp near Estes Park. It is an opportunity for us to go sledding, snowshoeing, ice skating, ice fishing, and play broomball. The day is unique for more than what we do, but also for where, why, and how we do it.
On Resolutions and Resignations
Shakespeare has Macbeth deliver a nihilistic soliloquy that begins, “Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow, / Creeps in this petty pace from day to day.” When death waits for each of us, what can be the ultimate meaning of our lives regardless of how floridly or cleverly they are described in exquisite language?
Christmas' Gift
It is our custom to associate gifts with Christmas rather than to think of Christmas as a gift. In this custom we are not wrong, but fail to see deeply enough.
The Christmas Season
Christmas is one of the only holidays for which we speak of there being an entire season imbued with a particular spirit. If the spirit that breathes life into Christmas is charity, it is a good thing that we lengthen it from a day to a month or more.
Thanksgiving
A remarkable holiday is now before us, and it is one that speaks to our sense of American exceptionalism in a way few holidays do.
Veterans Day
November 11, 2019 is Veterans Day – the 100th since President Wilson brought it into being as Armistice Day in 1919. It is interesting to note that in acknowledging this day there are no calls for students to be released from the schools as there are for other holidays.