• Duration: 5 Weekly 60-min. Workshops
  • Schedule: Forthcoming
  • Price: $160

Objective

To develop habits conducive to orderly and efficient meetings that foster rational deliberation and prudent decision-making according to Robert’s Rules of Order.

Outline

  1. Parliamentary Procedure and Governing Documents
  2. Main Motions and Subsidiary Motions
  3. Incidental Motions
  4. Voting Methods and Elections
  5. Agendas and Minutes

Instructor

Dr. Ryan MacPherson holds a PhD in history and philosophy of science from the University of Notre Dame. After serving for twenty years as a professor at Bethany Lutheran College, he was appointed academic dean of Luther Classical College in 2023. He is author of Rediscovering the American Republic, a two-volume anthology of primary sources in American history, as well as several other books on topics ranging from theology to politics to bioethics. Dr. MacPherson has testified in court in defense of a homeschool father and for the protection of traditional American civics curricula, contributed to legal briefs submitted to the U.S. Supreme Court in defense of marriage and the rule of law, appeared regularly on a variety of radio shows, and taught seminars for pastors and educators in Canada, Denmark, and Ecuador.

Currently Unscheduled

This course is currently unscheduled. If you would like it to be offered soon, please contact us.

Our Unique Approach

  • Supporting families in lifelong learning
  • Offering interactive live sessions through small-audience videoconferencing
  • Teaching according to the classical pursuit of goodness, truth, and beauty
  • Cultivating the values of Western civilization: natural law, cardinal and theological virtues, Socratic questioning, syllogistic reasoning
  • Promoting the ideals of America’s founding: representative government and the rule of law for protecting people’s God-given rights to life, liberty, and property
  • Standing on the foundation of the historic Christian faith as taught in Holy Scripture and confessed in the ecumenical creeds and Augsburg Confession