About this episode
In this episode of BaseCamp Live, host Davies Owens sits down with Paul Laywell, founder of Eureka Science Education, to tackle a lingering stereotype - classical Christian schools love great books, but struggle to do science with the same depth and rigor.
Paul shares his journey from public school teaching to becoming a “one man science department” in a classical Christian school, and why he became convinced that science is one of the most integratable disciplines. Not by forcing a Bible verse onto every lesson, and not by stripping science down to formulas and memorization, but by teaching science as a story, with real people, real ideas, and real consequences.
You will hear why Paul jettisoned most textbooks, how he uses history and philosophy to strengthen scientific understanding, and why families do not need to fear that a classical approach will “hurt” students headed for medicine, engineering, or other STEM-adjacent careers. In fact, Paul argues that what universities and employers need most are students who can think, reason, and ask good questions.
🎧 Tune in to hear:
Why “Bible verse on the board” integration can be a disservice to both Scripture and science
How telling the history of science helps students remember, and understand, what they are learning
A classroom example that starts atomic theory as a philosophical idea before it becomes a scientific construct
Why you cannot “cover it all,” and why depth beats speed and volume in a science classroom
Paul’s pushback on the myth that you need a STEM-school model to thrive in college science and engineering
How schools can build a science program that holds together rigor, wonder, curiosity, and theological imagination
A science classroom can be more than jam, cram, and forget. It can form students who love truth, pursue discovery with humility, and recognize God’s fingerprints in a world worth exploring.
Special Thanks to our partners who make BaseCamp Live possible:
Wisdom and EloquenceThe Herzog FoundationThe Champion GroupWisephone by TechlessZipCastWilson Hill Academy
Stay tuned for more enlightening discussions on classical Christian education, and join us next time