Yearly Archives: 2015


Announcements for December 7th

CANE

  • The Emporium Romanum has lots of great things for any occasion!
  • Know a great teacher who’s got wit, enthusiasm, optimism, and loyalty?  Then nominate that person for CANE’s Matthew I. Weincke Award.  Nominations are due by December 31st.
  • Applications for the Coulter (for study at the American Academy in Rome), Endowment (for study at the American School in Athens or other places besides the Academy in Rome) and the Poggioli Award (for summer study abroad) are due January 15th.
  • Applications for the Certification Scholarship are due February 1st.

BEYOND CANE

  • Fabulous offerings from ASCANIUS Youth Classics Institute, including opportunities to volunteer.
  • The Boston Area Classics Calendar has a lot going on, and a weekly email digest of upcoming events.
  • Lectures in western Massachusetts of interest to CANE members are posted at the Amherst College Classics Department website.
  • The American School of Classical Studies at Athens is offering the M. Alison Frantz Fellowship to Ph.D. candidates and recent Ph.D. grads. Click here for more details. Deadline is January 15.
  • The College of the Holy Cross is offering a full tuition scholarship to members of the class of 2020 who wish to major in the Classics – please let interested students know! The deadline is January 15, 2016. See here for more details.
  • The Annual Harry de Forest Smith Scholarship Exam in Greek:
    • For students of Greek, Amherst College offers a freshman scholarship to be awarded on the basis of a competitive examination taken in their senior year of high school. The next examination is scheduled for Friday, February 12, 2016, in each school in which there is one or more candidate(s) for the scholarship. Announcement of the award will be made when the successful competitor is notified of admission to Amherst College, on or about April 1. In order to qualify the competitor must have made application for admission to Amherst College. (The deadline for regular applications to Amherst College is January 1, 2016.) The holder of the scholarship will be required to take one of the regular courses in the Department of Greek during the freshman year at Amherst.For more information contact:  Classics@amherst.edu

Events

  • The Pioneer Valley Classics Day is being held January 15th from 9-2 p.m. at Mt. Holyoke College in South Hadley, MA.  There will be workshops, art contests, oral interpretations, certamina, museum visits, and a play produced by Amherst Middle School Latin students.  Please contact Bruce Arnold for details and registration packets.
  • The Paideia Institute is hosting a Living Latin in New York City event February 13-14, 2016.  Early-bird registration is due by January 1st.  See their website for additional programs and events!

Meetups

  • Live in western MA or northern CT and want to practice speaking in Latin? There is a large group that meets every Thursday at 7 p.m. in Hadley, MA! For details, contact TJ Howell.
  • In the Boston area? Check out the Active Latin Meetup page for events.

Jobs


A Summer at Villa Vergiliana

A CANE Endowment Scholarship Report by Susan Zoller: Two Vergilian Society Study Tours in Italy
I will remember gazing out from a villa rooftop toward the beautiful island of Ischia, hearing beautiful Italian music from a nearby venue, taking in beautiful fuchsia flowers in the courtyard, enjoying meals with friendly Anna and Simone serving us pasta, freshly picked garden vegetables, savory meats, or delicious desserts.   I will recall our hostess Nina greeting everyone: undergraduates, graduate students, and Latin teachers who gathered for conversation, informative workshops and engaging talks on-site by world-class scholars.   We made new friends and experienced a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.  These memories will remain whenever I think of my time at the Villa Vergiliana in Cumae, Italy, from June 26 to July 23, 2016. Both tours included 4 days in Rome: truly a Latin teacher’s dream come true!
It is with a deep sense of gratitude that I reflect upon my time at the Villa Vergiliana. This opportunity was made possible through generous scholarships from both the Vergilian Society (VS) and the Classical Association of New England (CANE) Endowment Fund.   My good friend and colleague, Diane Green, a Latin teacher at Co-Brown Academy in Northwood, NH, had encouraged me to apply for these scholarships and the two study tours at the Villa Vergiliana after she had received the same scholarship aid and attended in recent years.  As the VS and CANE invest in helping teachers to attend the study tours, I will also continue to encourage my fellow colleagues in the NH Classical Association and CANE to apply for scholarships and experience these study tours.
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I attended two study tours during my time in Italy: Romans, Etruscans, and Ancient Greeks: Exploring Antiquities from Tuscany to Campania with leader John Wonder for the first tour, and then Caesar and Vergil in Italy: a Study Tour for Teachers with Steve Tuck and Amy Leonard as leaders.  While at the Villa, it was a privilege to meet Professor Richard Thomas, president of the Vergilian Society and also other members of the board. It was such a highlight to be with people who love classical antiquities, Latin and Greek, and the people of Italy!   I was among several Latin teachers who enjoyed the hospitality of the Villa and who are now so excited about bringing to their students what they had experienced in their time in Italy.  For me this means enriching my Latin classes at Spaulding High School in Rochester, NH, with newly acquired understanding, information and visual imagery.
I am now able to teach Latin I-IV with a more visual sense of the subject matter having been on location at the sites associated with classical history.   I was able to learn from scholars who gave talks at multiple places in Rome, Pompeii, Herculaneum, Cumae, Tarquinia, Capri, Ischia, Capua, Sperlonga, Paestum, and Naples. I was able to learn from other Latin teachers about ways to teach Vergil and Caesar and as I teach my classes this year, I will share both experiences and photos from the study tours.   As we study Vergil’s Aeneid in Latin II and IV, we will view and discuss Lavinium, the tomb of Aeneas and Vergil’s tomb, the cave of the Sibyl, and the entrance to the underworld at Cumae.   When we study the Roman emperors I will share about Tiberius at Capri and Sperlonga and present photos of the palace of Augustus on the Palatine Hill, the Ara Pacis, the Forum of Trajan, and Trajan’s Column, the equestrian statue and column of Marcus Aurelius, the Colosseum (Vespasian and Titus), Arch of Titus, Arch of Septimius Severus, and the Arch of Constantine.
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When I teach about Julius Caesar, my students will visually tour his Forum and view places connected with his death.  Professor Steve Tuck encouraged all of us to use Trajan’s Column to help our students appreciate Caesar’s Gallic Wars—so many aspects of war visually depicted in that column!   When I teach Pliny in Latin IV, I will draw upon my photos and experiences of Vesuvius, Misenum, and Stabiae. In visiting several amphitheaters in addition to the Colosseum and hearing about the lives of the gladiators, I was inspired to share with my students specific insights gained from our site talks. All Latin students love hearing about gladiators!  Also, because Pompeii is very much a topic of interest and because I was able to have two all-day visits there with both John Wonder and then Steve Tuck, I will greatly enjoy sharing the information I gathered from an archaeological dig in progress there at the Villa of Mysteries!
Although I had been to Italy before, I had never been with fellow Latin teachers and scholarly lecturers for guides.  Nor had I ever stayed at a place so beautiful, charming, and friendly as the Villa Vergiliana. In each study tour, we became a family of friends who cared about each other.  I’m sure that I will stay in touch with many whom I met this summer, especially my two roommates, also fellow teachers.  The travel to significant sites fueled our passion for what we teach and prepare us to share our excitement with students and fellow educators. It is so wonderful that both the Vergilian Society and CANE choose to invest scholarship aid in the lives of teachers of the Classics.
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In closing, I will quote Christa McAuliffe, the astronaut who died in the NASA Challenger tragedy in 1986. She was from Concord, NH where I live.  I had the privilege of meeting her when I taught in Latin at Concord High School.  She said, “I touch the future; I teach.” In a very real sense, both the Vergilian Society and the Classical Association of New England are ‘touching the future’ as they invest in Latin teachers who daily ‘touch the future’ of their students; Latin teachers are in the position of igniting a spark of interest in Classical languages, literature, and history. I am very grateful to VS and CANE for investing in me and giving me the opportunity of a lifetime. Semper gratias vobis agam.


Announcements for November 29

CANE

BEYOND CANE

  • Fabulous offerings from ASCANIUS Youth Classics Institute, including opportunities to volunteer.
  • The Boston Area Classics Calendar has a lot going on, and a weekly email digest of upcoming events.
  • The Department of Classics at Brown University presents its 68th annual program of readings and songs in the spirit of the season, conducted entirely in Latin, on Monday, December 7th, 8:00 pm, at the First Baptist Meeting House, 75 North Main Street, Providence, RI.  (English translations are provided, for those whose Latin is a little rusty.)  Admission is free; all are welcome.
  • The American School of Classical Studies at Athens is offering the M. Alison Frantz Fellowship to Ph.D. candidates and recent Ph.D. grads. Click here for more details. Deadline is January 15.
  • The College of the Holy Cross is offering a full tuition scholarship to members of the class of 2020 who wish to major in the Classics – please let interested students know! The deadline is January 15, 2016. See here for more details.
  • The Annual Harry de Forest Smith Scholarship Exam in Greek:
    • For students of Greek, Amherst College offers a freshman scholarship to be awarded on the basis of a competitive examination taken in their senior year of high school. The next examination is scheduled for Friday, February 12, 2016, in each school in which there is one or more candidate(s) for the scholarship. Announcement of the award will be made when the successful competitor is notified of admission to Amherst College, on or about April 1. In order to qualify the competitor must have made application for admission to Amherst College. (The deadline for regular applications to Amherst College is January 1, 2016.) The holder of the scholarship will be required to take one of the regular courses in the Department of Greek during the freshman year at Amherst.For more information contact:  Classics@amherst.edu

Events

  • The Granite State Certamen (open to students in MA, NH, and VT) is happening December 5th, 9:30-2:30, at Dover High School in New Hampshire.  Interested schools should contact Mrs. Jennifer Connelly by November 23rd to register.
  • The Pioneer Valley Classics Day is being held January 15th from 9-2 p.m. at Mt. Holyoke College in South Hadley, MA.  There will be workshops, art contests, oral interpretations, certamina, museum visits, and a play produced by Amherst Middle School Latin students.  Please contact Bruce Arnold for details and registration packets.
  • The Paideia Institute is hosting a Living Latin in New York City event February 13-14, 2016.  Early-bird registration is due by January 1st.  See their website for additional programs and events!

Meetups

  • Live in western MA or northern CT and want to practice speaking in Latin? There is a large group that meets every Thursday at 7 p.m. in Hadley, MA! For details, contact TJ Howell.
  • In the Boston area? Check out the Active Latin Meetup page for events.

Jobs