Monthly Archives: April 2014


Genius Hour


Genius hour is a concept that has been gaining popularity in education circles recently. Also known as 20% time, it is a model that both businesses and educators have utilized to increase the productivity of their employees and students. The premise is that if you give people free time to pursue activities that are relevant and interesting to them, they will create and innovate. Usually the free time is limited to about 20% of what is available. (This can take the form of 1 day per week or 1 class period per cycle or 15 minutes in a 90 minute block, among others.) In an educational context, the free time is not anarchy; there are still some rules and regulations as to how to best utilize the time. The point is for students to explore new avenues of learning that are relevant to them, and come out of the process with a product of their learning. It is said that Google has been using this model for a while, and, as a result, Gmail has been born out of the process.
One may ask, “Doesn’t giving free time cut into our already overstuffed schedules and infringe on our learning objectives?” In short, no. A.J. Juliani has a nice post rounding up anecdotes, evidence, and educational genius hour entrepreneurs who all validate the effect of 20% time. Not only are the products of the actual hour interesting and important, but the “side-effects” of inquiry-based thinking include higher test, a deeper, richer experience of the process of thinking and increased engagement and responsibility.
So what does this actually look like in a school environment? Our vice principal, Tim Chace, started implementing a genius hour in the beginning of this school year as a next step in professional development. Faculty brainstormed issues, from creating interdisciplinary units to exploring technology to creating flipped classes. We were then able to group up to tackle these issues. Some groups had longer-term projects that are still being explored; others spent only a few weeks on a project and have moved on to new ones. We still have “traditional” faculty meeting times, but these genius hour mornings (each Wednesday for 30 minutes) do help the faculty the explore educational issues in an open way.
A colleague of mine who teaches Spanish has implemented a “Passion Project” in one of her classes. She notes that although there is a wide assortment of projects (e.g. painting a Spanish mural, writing a play based on a book, creating a Zumba class in Spanish), managing the time for her students is sometimes difficult. Because there is no set end goal, it can be difficult to judge students’ progress and how effectively they use their time. She notes that if she were to do it next year, she would create more benchmarks and due dates to create a structure, even though the topics themselves could still be quite diverse.
As for myself, I am trying a “Genius Quarter” in my Latin 4/5. The students are “Catullused-out” and when I mentioned Horace they all ingemuerunt. So I had them brainstorm topics they were interested in and tasked them with finding primary documents we could read. Each week we will cover a new topic through the lens of primary Latin sources. We will read, discuss (Latine, si possibile est), do activities, and assess. All of these things will be created by the students. My role is as a sounding board, a director, and a co-participant (much of the Latin they’ve found so far is completely foreign to me, and ranging from 50 BCE to 1700 CE.) My goal is for my students to engage with the material and have fun with it, and I am curious to read new authors.
Do you have any experience with the genius hour concept? Share any comments or concerns below.


Announcements for 13 April

CANE

  • The theme for the 2014 CANE Summer Institute is “On the Shoulders of Giants”: Greco-Roman Giants and their Modern Emulators.”  Register now!
  • The CANE calendar is available from Amazon with free super saver shipping: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1934971340 It starts in September of 2014.
  • May 1st is the deadline to apply for the next installment of CANE Discretionary Funds. Use it for classroom materials, a certamen machine, anything you can get long-term use from! Apply to the Immediate Past President.
  • It isn’t too early to pay membership dues for the 2014-2015 school year.

BEYOND CANE

Contest Winners

Conferences/Meetings

  • ”The spring meeting of CAM is Saturday, May 3, 2014 and will be held at Westwood High School (200 Nahatan St, Westwood, MA). The theme of the meeting will be “All Things Augustus” — appropriate for the year in which we celebrate (sive commemorate) the 2000th anniversary of his death. CLIPEUS also plans to hold a Prandium Latinum there!
  • The 15th Wyoming Summer Classics Institute, held in Laramie, Wyoming from June 15-20, is called “The Emperor and the Philosopher: Nero, Seneca, and Their World.” Download their flyer for more information!

Meetups and Certamina

  • CLIPEUS is running several Latin speaking meetups in Boston. Check the link for more information.
  • THE BROOKLINE CERTAMEN
    (formerly The 2766 Certamen)
    This Certamen, held May 31st at Brookline High School, is open to any student who has not placed 1st, 2nd, or 3rd in a Certamen in Massachusetts by April 1 of the 2013-2014 school year. All questions will be based on the National Latin Exam syllabus. There will be no final rounds: everybody will play all four rounds, with total points determining the winners. Rank pitting after the first round means that teams of similar abilities will play against each other. Register at the above link by May 12th, please!

Summer Opportunities

  • Registration for this summer’s American Classical League Summer Institute in Williamsburg, VA is now open.
  • SALVI’s Rusticatio Latin July 2014 immersion weeks and pedagogy seminars are filling up fast. Act now if you’re interested in attending!
  • McGill is offering a summer course in Classical Studies in June and July. Check out their flyer.
  • The American Institute for Roman Culture (AIRC) has a 2014 schedule for its Summer and Fall study abroad programs, and include Media Studies, Art History, and Field School Excavations.
  • Do your students ask you how they can improve their Latin? Do they ask you about summer opportunities in Latin or ancient history? Calder Classics invites students entering grades 9 through 12 to join us in Rome in July 20 – August 3, 2014. Over the course of a 2-week program, the Classics will come alive through the study of Latin, exploration of ancient and modern sites and immersion in daily Italian life. Calder’s small, personalized programs of 6-8 students allow us to provide individual instruction to each student in both Latin and ancient history.
  • Do you have a passion for Classical, Medieval, and Renaissance Latin? Would you like to improve the speed and fluency with which you read Latin? Then join the immersion program at the Conventiculum Bostoniense, taught by experts in Classical and Neo-Latin from both Europe and the United States. You can also earn graduate credit, by taking one of our two week-length courses. Find more information and application materials here:https://sites.google.com/site/conventiculumbostoniense

Jobs

  • Latin Instructor: Hopkins School, an independent, college-preparatory day school in New Haven, is seeking a part-time Latin instructor for the grade 7 introductory course. Instructor would work in close collaboration with other teachers of the same course, using Ecce Romani, 4th edition. Qualifications: A BA, grades 7-12 teaching experience and excellent Latin language skills are strongly preferred. Post-secondary teaching experience will be considered. Master’s For more information about Hopkins School, please visit our website www.hopkins.edu. If you would like to apply for this position, please contact: 203.397.1001 x118 or academicopening@hopkins.edu

Latin curiosities, 9/11 Memorials, and Ancient Crimea: Links for 10 April

Here’s a list of some of the places, news, and conversations we’ve found interesting this week:
Leo Tepper has a great little blog called The Latin Reading Blog, that has snippets of all sorts of Latin curiosities with English translations and vocab notes.
City Room at the NYTimes has an article about reactions to the Aeneid inscription on the 9/11 Memorial.
On National Public Radio, Audie Cornish from All Things Considered interviews Monsignor Daniel Gallagher, the man behind the Pope’s Latin tweets.
With everything going on in Crimea right now, Mary Beard thought it might be interesting to explore what was happening there in the ancient world on her blog, A Don’s Life.
Oops! The RogueClassicist shared an article about the University of York’s getting, er, “busted”, over their new logo in the Independent.