The temple gates open at dawn. Inside, monks teach the mind's hardest disciplines โ high school and AP coursework forged through meditation and trial.

Keeper of the temple scrolls. Shifu Wen Long teaches that a steady breath unlocks the hardest problem.
Fifteen centuries ago, a wandering teacher climbed Songshan Mountain carrying only a brush, an ink stone, and a single question: can the mind be tempered like the body? He sat in meditation for nine years until the answer arrived as a flood of equations, verses, and laws of nature. The Shaolin Temple rose around him โ a place where students learn that calculus, chemistry, and rhetoric are simply the modern forms of an ancient kung fu of the mind.
Functions, quadratics, logarithms โ the language the temple writes upon.
Angles, proofs, and the sacred shapes of the temple walls.
Cells, genetics, ecosystems โ the breathing world around us.
Atoms, bonds, reactions โ the alchemy of the modern monk.
Themes, character, voice โ the great stories that shape the mind.
Revolution to civil rights โ the foundations of a nation.
Empires, revolutions, and the long arc of human civilization.
Limits, derivatives, integrals โ the unbroken flow of change.
Molecular biology, evolution, ecology โ the unity and diversity of life.
Rhetorical analysis, argument, synthesis โ wield language with precision.
From colonization to the modern era โ the long American story.
Stoichiometry, thermodynamics, equilibrium โ the laws beneath matter.
Cross-cultural connections from 1200 CE to today.