勛圖厙

Summer Latin Teaching Institute

The Summer Latin Teaching Institute at the 勛圖厙 equips current and aspiring Latin
teachers with the most effective, research-informed methods for teaching Latin in K12 classrooms.

This two-week graduate-level intensive integrates active Latin use with the science of second language
acquisition (SLA) and historical pedagogy. Participants will not only improve their fluency in reading,
writing, and speaking Latin, but also gain the theoretical and practical foundation to teach Latin as a
living language.

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Frequently Asked Questions

 

This is a two-week intensive course on campus in Irving, Texas.  This year, the course takes place from June 28th to July 11th.
You should have two semesters of college Latin or equivalent proficiency.

This course is a 3-credit graduate course which counts toward the Classical Education M.A.  This equals approximately 45 hours of instruction.  

Each class has 7-15 participants per section.  Based on enrollment, we plan to offer two sections, one for elementary teachers and another for middle school teachers.

Residential (non-credit): $2,499

Commuter (non-credit): $1,999

Residential (for-credit): $3,999

Commuter (for-credit): $3,499

For more information on this program in general, please contact classical_ed@udallas.edu. For information specific to Track A, contact lmeidt@udallas.edu.  And for information specific to Track B, contact eellis@udallas.edu.  

Details of the Program

 

Time                               Activity

7:30am                           Daily Mass available in the 勛圖厙 Chapel in Latin

8:30am-9am                  Ientaculum (Breakfast) --- conducted in Latin

9:15am-10:30am          Sessio I --- Latin language practice

11am-12:15pm             Sessio II --- Latin language practice

12:15pm-1pm               Prandium (Lunch) --- conducted in Latin

Noon                              Daily Mass available in the 勛圖厙 Chapel

1:15pm-2:30pm           Seminar --- pedagogy, theory, and methodology (in English)

*The exact schedule is subject to adjustments

Lead Instructor(s): 1 faculty member per section with expertise in Latin pedagogy and Second Language Acquisition.

All required texts are low-cost and widely available.

Estimated total cost per participant: Under $50

Epitome Historiae Sacrae --- Charles Lhomond

Sermones Romani --- Hans rberg

Readings and Exercises in Latin Prose Composition --- Milena Minkova & Terence Tunberg

Included: Breakfast and lunch (Monday--Friday)

Optional Add-On: Dinner and on-campus housing is available through 勛圖厙 Residence Life & Dining.

Lodging and meal coordination will be handled directly with campus departments.  For questions or more information, please contact 勛圖厙 Residence Life and 勛圖厙 Dining.

Course Tracks & Requirements

 

This track is taught by Dr. Laura Eidt.  It is aimed at teachers in elementary schools with little or very little prior experience with Latin/spoken Latin to help them create an input-rich Latin classroom. Some of the teaching skills to be practiced include TPR (total physical response), circling questions, picture study, readers theater, a variety of post-reading activities, as well as contextualized and meaningful grammar tasks.
This track is taught by Dr. Erik Ellis.  It takes post-beginner Latin students and instructors through a comprehensive course of exercises that teach the habits of Latin reading fluency and discussion. Students learn to interact with unadapted Latin texts by using dialogues to discuss the grammatical, syntactical, literary, and cultural features of both prose and poetry. By the end of the course, students will understand how to conduct a socratic seminar on a Latin text in Latin and will have built a strong foundation for oral, academic Latin fluency.

To get 3 graduate credits, choose from the following project options:

A) Write a (8-10) page research paper on a topic of language pedagogy 
B) do a creative writing project in Latin on a topic of the students choice OR a fluent performance of a level-appropriate Readers Theater/colloquium
C) Write a detailed lesson plan and film a 10-15 min teaching demonstration of part of that lesson