Monthly Archives: June 2014


Announcements for June 8

CANE

BEYOND CANE

Conferences/Meetings

  • ASCANIUS is offering a workshop in Boston on July 18 for introducing Latin to elementary and middle school students. Registration is due by June 13. Find out more here.
  • The Classics Program at the University of New Hampshire is pleased to issue a call for papers for its first Rouman Symposium for Research in Classics and the Humanities, to be held on the Durham campus from October 17–19, 2014. The Symposium is sponsored by the John C. Rouman Classical Lecture Series and will run from the afternoon of Friday the 17th until the early afternoon of Sunday the 19th. For more information, or to send in an abstract, contact R. Scott Smith.
  • The Academy Vivarium Novum is offering ten full tuition scholarships for high school students (16-18 years old) and ten full tuition scholarships for University students (18-24 years old) of any part of the world. The scholarships will cover all of the costs of room, board, teaching and didactic materials for courses to be held from October 6, 2014 until June 13, 2015 on the grounds of the Academy’s campus at Rome.The goal is to achieve a perfect command of both Latin and Greek through a total immersion in the two languages in order to master without any hindrances the texts and concepts which have been handed down from the ancient times, middle ages, the Renaissance period and modern era, and to cultivate the humanities in a manner similar to the Renaissance humanists.All the classes will be conducted in Latin, except for Greek classes which will be conducted in ancient Greek. Application letters must be sent to info@vivariumnovum.net by July 1st in order to receive consideration. You can also use that email to ask for details on how to apply!

Meetups

  • CLIPEUS is running several Latin speaking meetups in eastern MA. Up this month are:Sunday, June 8, 2:00 PM – Latin Reading Group
    Panera Bread, 115 Stuart St., Boston, MA
    We will read through and discuss Latine the Erasmus colloquium entitled “Diversoria.” Prior knowledge of the text is not necessary, but participants are invited to read it beforehand.
    Saturday, June 14, 10:00 AM – Cafea Latina
    Panera Bread, 58 Peters St., North Andover, MA
    General Latin conversation will take place. Venite ad Paneram et loquimini Latine!
  • Spoken Latin gathering Monday, June 16 at 6 pm at Paneras in Waterford, CT. Contact JFrazier@waterfordschools.org with questions.
  • Live in western MA and want to practice speaking in Latin? There is a large group that meets weekly in Amherst! For details, contact TJ Howell.

Summer Opportunities

  • The Cambridge Latin Course is offering a three-day workshop in Boston, August 5-7. See their announcement for details!
  • Registration for this summer’s American Classical League Summer Institute in Williamsburg, VA is now open.
  • 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

Romans in Arthur Evans' Carpet? Links 5 Jun

Here’s what we’ve found fascinating or curious this week!
The Arthur Evans Archive! Though it’s mostly a list of what’s to be found if you visit, there are some examples of his drawings from his travels, photographs, and pieces he dug up.
Slate Magazine has a fun article about the expression of the Anglo-Saxon love of riddles in their art.
If you like Latinate puns, you have to see this 1920s collection by Berthold Ullman, which appeared in the Classical Journal.
The blog Pomegranate Beginnings has a nice article about techniques for doing Comprehensive Input if you’re interested in an active approach to teaching Latin.
The UK’s Independent has an article on Pompeii’s funding woes.
Oh no! There are Romans in my carpet! Here’s a cute diversion on iOS devices if you need something to fill your idle hours.


Observations from a First Year Teacher 2

Today’s guest post is from Michael Hoffman, who is just about to finish his first year teaching in Groton-Dunstable Regional High School in Massachusetts.
I remember finishing my first semester teaching undergrads during my MAT program at UMass. I sat down one day in the brief lull that is the period between the end of classes and the start of finals and took the time to return to my questions from the beginning of the semester. How do I design activities for a class with wildly disparate ability levels? How do I help my students to actively engage in the technical aspects of Latin grammar? How can I ensure that they read the words in front of them as a language, instead of piecing them together like a puzzle? At the start, I must have believed that, given enough time, I would find answers to these questions, that years down the road I would look back at myself as a fledgling teacher and laugh at my own ignorance. And yet, two and a half years later, I am approaching the end of my first year teaching in high school, and I have found that instead of accruing answers, I have only gathered more questions.
My first year has been largely fantastic—with the exception of that long, cold, bitter winter and various other issues that I suspect cannot be separated from anyone’s first year in the teaching profession. I got my BA from Florida State and my MAT from UMass Amherst, and as I look back at my time at these institutions, I realize that they both prepared me exceptionally for my chosen career as a teacher and scholar of Latin. What they did not—and could not—prepare me for was everything else that goes into being a teacher. Indeed, I think my greatest surprise this year has been the realization that being a teacher has much more to it than simply teaching my students Latin.
I, of course, had some conception of faculty meetings, grading, and extracurricular activities when I was a student and when I was training to be a teacher, but the reality has dwarfed my expectations. It has been a humbling and enlightening experience to watch my colleagues at GD and to understand that if I simply walk into the building, teach Latin, and leave the building each day, I have not truly done my job. Being a teacher, as I have come to understand it, comprises not only the act of education but also the nurturing of our nation’s youth as they grow into the citizens of tomorrow. We have a vital task, not to treat our students as receptacles for knowledge about ancient languages, but, through the study of Classics, to help them grow into a new generation of questioners and dreamers, critical-thinkers who can form their own opinions and shape the world of tomorrow into what it will need to be.
Naturally, I do not always succeed with this goal, and it’s so easy to lose sight of the big picture while my mind boils with questions of how to keep this student on task or coerce that student into doing homework. Any homework. From any point in the year. Please. Just one assignment? No? Well, back to my article. Each day, of course, brings fresh challenges, and most of these come to me as questions of how best to teach Latin concepts. For instance, how does one help students understand the dative case or, perhaps more often on my mind, the so-called “perfect active participle”? Yet, I believe that my greatest challenge and the aspect of this first year that has most frustrated me has been the fact that I am not the best teacher I could be. I work hard at it, but I still have many, many days where I look back at class and say, “Well, Michael, we’re reteaching that tomorrow.” I know that my students deserve the very best, but I often fear that I don’t know what exactly that is. Three years ago, I probably would have believed that I would one day be free from this feeling, that I would one day know the way to teach. Now, however, I suspect that three years hence, I will still be doubting my methods and reinventing my curriculum—and I suspect that is what I should be doing.
As one of my favorite Samuel Beckett quotes puts it, “Ever tried. Ever failed. Doesn’t matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better.” Teaching, as I have come to understand it, is not a profession for those who want answers. We are the profession of failing better. We work in the realm of potentiality, taking what the students have learned and weaving it with what they will learn, pushing them ever onward towards an ability to understand this incredibly foreign language. And if sometimes our plans do not succeed, if they blow up in our face or fall flat, it is our job to dust ourselves off and return to work the next day, full of new ideas and ready to fail again—but this time to do it better. This thought has propelled me on throughout this year as the questions and the grading have piled up, as I have learned how to be a teacher, rather than simply how to teach, and while it does not strike me as the answer, I believe it will work for the time being as an answer. Now, all I have to do is actually figure out a way to teach that perfect active participle.