Mission Statement
What We Want Our Kids To Get Out Of The SCA
I. Placing History In Context
I want my children to:
- Experience history and not just read about it, so that the facts they do
learn really stick.
- Grasp that history is more than names and dates--history is lifetimes
lived by real people. Through the SCA they can experience many of the
smells, tastes, textures, sights and sounds of earlier time periods. They
can make and wear the clothes, taste the food, dance the dances, hear the
stories, watch the battles of those earlier times.
- Experience things that many people only read about. When they read about
Bilbo’s shirt of elven mail in The Hobbit, I want them to have seen (and
worn!) real chain mail, instead of imagining knitted yarn painted silver.
- Have a sense that things were not always as they are now.
- Understand that civilizations rise and fall.
- Know that having earlier technology did not mean that people were stupid.
- Have some idea of what "king" and "lord" meant in
medieval or biblical times.
- Understand that Western Civ is not just a list of dead white men.
II. Value of Hands-On Real-Life Experiences
I want the SCA to:
- Show that it is possible to have fun without TV.
- Show that it is possible to make music without a computer.
- Show that you can make toys / armor / art that better than you can buy.
- Give them a reason to go camping a lot.
III. Creativity
I want my children to:
- See people imagining things and then bringing them into being, whether it’s
a dress, a suit of armor, a heraldic device, a feast, or a tournament.
- Realize that there are many kinds of creativity and many outlets for
creativity. Not only can you paint a picture or write a poem or short story,
you can also make medieval clothing or armor; paint illuminated manuscripts,
weave cloth, make lace, or cook a fancy subtlety. Not only can you act in a
play, you can also perform a story or song in a bardic circle. And,
creativity doesn’t stop once you’re no longer in school.
- See their father doing something that he loves and that they can
understand. They can’t go to work with him, and if they did, they couldn’t
understand what he does.
- See grownups having fun at dress-up, play-acting, arts & crafts, and
board games. One of my favorite pictures from last 12th night was that of a
grown man playing backgammon with a small boy.
IV. Learning Is Fun
The SCA should show them that learning:
- Can be fun and self-directed, even for "dry" subjects like
history.
- Doesn’t stop after a certain age.
V. Old-Fashioned Virtues
The SCA can also:
- Give them a venue in which it is not unusual to be polite.
- Reinforce civic virtues of honor, courage, duty, and service.
- Reassure them that it's OK for poetry to have meter and rhyme.
VI. Creating Context For Other Subjects
Learning works best in context. Kids will seek out or happen upon many
contexts that will make them want to know more (this is why un-schooling works
pretty well). Other contexts we create for them. The SCA can:
- Give them a context for arts, crafts, music, dancing, etc. Crafts are not
just something you do in Sunday school; dance is not just for dance class;
singing is not just for hymns in church; etc.
- Give them a context and timeline for classical music. Give them a sense of
the age and lineage of the ancient music in our hymnal.
- Give them a context for studying Shakespeare or Milton.
- Give them a niche market for running a small business. This is a
great way to teach math, economics, stewardship, etc.
- (Later) Give them a context for studying Latin. Between "Adeste
Fideles" and gross anatomy are a lot of years when they should be
building this base layer. Reading and composing mottoes is a way to lighten
it up, at least.