
Begin with rest, not rigor. Start a gentle, Gospel-rooted sabbatical with The Great Pause™.
A distinct shift occurs somewhere around the sixth grade. The sweet child who once accepted stories with wonder is replaced by a new person. This child is quick to point out inconsistencies, loves to debate, and whose favorite word is suddenly, “Why?” For many parents, this season can feel challenging, like a storm of argumentativeness has descended upon a once-peaceful home.
But this change is not a flaw to be corrected. Instead, it is a God-given developmental stage to be embraced. This is the dawn of the classical Logic Stage, an age of inquiry where the mind awakens to abstract thought. At Living Arts Press™, we define the focus of these middle school years with the motto: “I THINK Creatively.” Our task is to honor our child’s intellect by giving them the tools they need to pursue truth with rigor and creative insight.
A middle schooler’s argumentative nature is not rebellion. Rather, it is a hunger for truth and a desire to understand how the world fits together. Instead of suppressing this impulse, we must equip it. This is the perfect time to introduce the formal study of logic, the “art of thinking.” In The Trivium Core™, our standalone course for this stage, we give students the tools of learning itself. They learn to identify logical fallacies, analyze arguments, and construct their own valid syllogisms.
Indeed, this is a profoundly empowering skill. It transforms their impulse to argue from a relational conflict into an academic discipline. They learn that the goal of a debate is not to “win,” but to collaboratively discover truth. Students do not learn these skills in a vacuum. In fact, they immediately apply them to every other subject, from analyzing scientific theories to deconstructing arguments in a primary source document.
As your child’s thinking becomes more analytical, their study of the humanities must also deepen. In The Chronos Project™, our integrated history program, the Logic Stage marks a key shift. Students move from simply hearing the story to analyzing its structure. They go beyond absorbing narratives to creating detailed timelines, comparing primary sources, and asking critical “why” questions about historical events.
They are no longer just learning what happened. Instead, they are learning to think like a historian. This process hones their analytical skills and teaches them that history is not a series of disconnected facts, but a linear story of God’s providence.
This deepening of analytical thought is mirrored in their writing skills. In The Scriptorium™, the Logic Stage is the time of transition from primarily oral to written narration. After reading a passage from science or history, we now ask the student to “tell it back” on paper, summarizing the key ideas in their own words.
This single practice is a powerhouse. It may seem simple, but it is a sophisticated intellectual exercise. To narrate well in writing, a student must first internalize the information. Then, they must identify the most important points, structure them logically, and articulate them clearly. This organically builds the foundational skills of outlining and summarizing without the need for dry, formulaic programs.
In an age of inquiry, the most important habits we can cultivate are intellectual virtues. The Virtue & Vocation Spiral™ focuses on the Habits of a Thinker: Intellectual Honesty, Perseverance, and Humility. We cultivate these through the signature practice of the Thinker’s Journal and the Socratic conversations of your Weekly Dialogue.
The Weekly Dialogue is your time to ask good questions. For example, instead of just checking for right answers, you inquire into their process: “Tell me how you worked through that math problem. Where did you get stuck, and what did you do to persevere?” or “How did you represent the author’s argument in your narration, even if you disagreed with it? That shows great honesty.” This practice transforms your role from grader to mentor. Consequently, it teaches your child to value the integrity of their thought process as much as the final product.
The age of inquiry is a gift. It is a sacred season where your child builds the intellectual and spiritual framework that will support them for life. By embracing their questions and giving them the tools to think well, you are preparing them to love the Lord their God with all their heart, soul, and mind.
A Final Word
The age of inquiry is a gift. By embracing your child’s questions and giving them tools to think well, you’re preparing them to love the Lord their God with all their heart, soul, and mind. Start by tending the soul of the teacher.
Begin here → Get The Great Pause™ (free)
September 28, 2025
© 2025 Living Arts Press™. All rights reserved | fergus falls, minnesota
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