BY
EIGHTH GRADE, students are ready to study modern history and have
the ability to see the wholeness of the globe. During eighth grade,
history is an intensive study of the industrial revolution to
the modern day, focusing as well on outstanding individuals such
as Lincoln, Jefferson and Edison in American history and great
figures such as Ghandi, Albert Schweitzer, Martin Luther King
and others from the 20th century. Geography takes up the same
theme, showing the role played by every part of the earth in modem
industrial civilization. Additional lessons are presented in physics
as well as acoustics, thermodynamics, mechanics, climate, electricity,
and magnetism, and the children are now introduced to hydraulics,
aerodynamics, meteorology and ecology. Chemistry is also considered
in relation to industry.
Mathematics emphasizes the practical
applications of arithmetic, algebra and geometry. Man is again
the subject of nature study through physiology of the human organism.
Literature focuses on the theme of human freedom in the short
story, letters and Shakespearean drama. By the end of eighth grade,
the children should have a well-rounded general picture of human
life and the universe.