Perfecting Eloquence: Jesuit Pedagogy in the First-Year Writing Classroom

More on the Ratio Studiorum

As the Society of Jesus grew and began founding hundreds of schools across the entire world, some measure of uniformity and quality control was required. The solution was the Ratio Studiorum, a 1599 document outlining the framework and hierarchy of a Jesuit school that was soon distributed among the burgeoning network of Jesuit education.

The Ratio Studiorum outlined everything from the progression of studies to the kinds of texts that should be taught, to the hours of the day when students should be resting or studying. It was, as scholar and translator Claude Pavur, S.J. writes, a "code" for replication and dissemination of a distinctly Jesuit education.

To read a translation of the original 1599 Ratio Studiorum, click here. To learn more about the Ratio and its role in forming Jesuit education, see The Ratio Studiorum: The Official Plan for Jesuit Education by Clade Pavur S.J.

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