Sunday, January 31, 2010

Required Materials for "Let's Learn Latin 2010"

Each student is responsible for purchasing his/her own books. Three are required:
  1. Lingua Latina: Part I, Familia Romana.  This is the textbook/reader. Entirely composed in Latin, Part I, Familia Romana, provides an excellent introduction to Latin, including the essentials of Latin grammar and a basic vocabulary of over 1500 words. The thirty-five chapters describe the life of a Roman family in the 2nd century A.D., and culminate in readings from classical poets and Donatus’s Ars Grammatica, the standard Latin school text for a millennium. Each chapter is divided into two or three lectiones (lessons) of a couple pages each followed by a grammar section, Grammatica Latina, and three exercises or Pensa. Hans Ørberg’s impeccable Latinity, humorous stories, and the Peer Lauritzen illustrations make this work a classic. The book includes a table of inflections, a Roman calendar, and a word index, Index vocabulorum. (Note: this is available in either paperback or hardback -- your choice.) [Amazon price: $11.90 paper, $16.47 hardbound]
  2.  Exercitia Latina I. This will be used for written homework exercises, to help you begin to practice what was covered in class. This book contains an extensive collection of exercises—entirely composed in Latin—for the 133 lectiones in Part I: Familia Romana. An important tool which every student will profit from and enjoy. [Amazon price: $7.93]
  3. Latine Disco: Student’s Manual. This student’s manual is written in English with a guide to pronunciation, instructions and information on key points to be noted in each chapter. In class, we will try to recognize how grammatical constructions work in the context of our reading, while this manual will provide more explicit discussion of what we have gone over in class. [Amazon price: $6.00]
If you would like to buy these required texts from Amazon (the best price I've found), just click the Course Materials link in the right sidebar on this page, and then select each of the books marked as "required" to add it to your online shopping cart. The price of the three books together will qualify your purchase for free shipping (min. $25).

You will see a couple of other suggested items in the Amazon list, but you need not buy them now (or ever).

Introductory Session Sunday, 7 February, 1 p.m. at the Catholic Church of Saint Mary the Virgin (Anglican Use)

I'm delighted that at least a dozen parishioners at Saint Mary's have expressed enthusiastic interest in the Latin class (including one or two of those mysteriously-designated "advanced adolescents"). Before we begin regular class meetings, I will present an introduction to the course next Sunday at 1 p.m. to give everyone a feel for how we will proceed, to try to reach a consensus on the best time for the class to meet (several people have suggested Sunday afternoons, which would be fine with me). My intention is to accommodate everyone who is truly interested, if at all possible. Those planning to attend should gather at the conference table in the back room where the adult Bible study meets on Sunday mornings (does this room have a name?).

Here is what I plan to cover at that time. First, some necessary nuts and bolts:
  • Required textbooks (see below)
  • Optional supplementary materials available
  • Possible times for regular class meetings 
  • Tuition cost (this will be as low as possible, to compensate a little for your unemployed Latin instructor's travel and time)
Something more interesting, I hope:
  • A quick overview of the importance and development of Latin in Western culture
  • An overview of the method we'll be using to learn Latin
  • If time and interest permit, we may get in a little practice beginning to practice pronouncing Latin, as well.
What I hope to accomplish in this preliminary meeting:
  • A list of those who definitely wish to commit to the class
  • An agreed upon time to meet each week
  • Clarification of any questions, qualms, or quibbles from prospective students
  • A date & time for our first class meeting
  • Sustained enthusiasm for our new undertaking!
If there is anyone who wants to join the class but who will not be able to attend the meeting on Feb. 7, please contact me by phone or email to let me know of your interest. I will post any developments here on the class blog.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Let’s Learn Latin!

Who is this course for?
Adults or advanced adolescents who would like to learn to read and understand (even speak!) Latin quickly and with a minimum of drudgery. High school students (including home-schooled) who have not had an opportunity to study in their own schools, and adults who are interested in knowing Latin but think they are "too old" to start a new language, or who believe that Latin is "too difficult," can benefit equally from this course. Anyone who has studied Latin in the past but "lost" much of what they learned may also find this course a useful and enjoyable "refresher."

What curriculum will be used?
Hans Ørberg's Lingua Latina Per Se Illustrata, a method based on the way we naturally acquire language, which gets the student reading real Latin right away, learning grammar naturally and contextually as we go. This method can be much more effective than many others at getting students not only to learn, but to retain and internalize what they have learned, by reading and discussing (in Latin!) the textbook's entertaining, ongoing story of a Roman family living in the second century of the Christian Era.

When will the course be offered?
Days and times will be determined based on the availability of the instructor and prospective students. Most likely, the class will meet once or twice per week during the afternoon or evening. All new material will be introduced during the class, and students will be expected to review, practice and complete written exercises on their own time between class meetings. A free introduction to the course will be held at St Mary's on Sunday, 7 February, at 1:00 p.m., to allow Dr. Nicholas to introduce the curriculum to prospective students and discuss details of when & where to meet. Students are asked to commit to a minimum of three months' study, although the class may continue as long as there is interest.

Where will the class be held? In the parish house of St Mary the Virgin Catholic Church in Arlington, unless the class members prefer to arrange a different venue (a café or a student's home).

Why would anyone want to study Latin?
Latin is the mother-tongue of Western civilization and the Church. Now that Pope Benedict XVI is encouraging Catholics to reacquaint themselves with the riches of the Latin liturgy, this is an excellent time to begin to learn (or re-learn) the language which became the common tongue of the early Church and has continued to be the "native language" of
Catholic liturgy and spirituality ever since. And students who continue with the Ørberg curriculum will find that, after completing the first-year text, Familia Romana, they are ready to begin reading many great writers of Rome's Golden Age of literature, such as Cicero, Plautus, Vergil, Pliny, and others. Also, most people find that as they learn to understand Latin, their understanding of English and other modern languages is also deepened and illuminated.

Who will teach this course?
Dr. Lisa Nicholas, who has taught and tutored Latin through the intermediate level (advanced grammar and reading) at both the University of Dallas (where she was awarded her doctorate in literature) and at the University of Southern Indiana (where she taught English and Humanities for five years).

What is the cost of the course?
There will be a modest per-class tuition fee, and students will be responsible for purchasing their own textbooks (total price is less than $30 on Amazon). The tuition fee may be paid in advance by the week or the month.

How will students' progress be assessed? There will be ongoing informal assessment in class to make sure that every student is truly learning the material, so that the pace of the class is matched to the students' rate of learning. Students who wish or need to have more formal assessment (exams & grades) will be accommodated.

What should I do if I am interested in this course?
Contact Dr. Lisa Nicholas (info below) and plan to attend the free introductory class on
Sunday, 7 February
:


Voice mail: 682-227-2535
Email: learn_latin2010@yahoo.com