General Syllabus: High School Latin
2
2008-09 School Year
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Instructor: Dave Spotts |
IM or Talk: spottsinator@gmail.com |
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Office Hours: TBA |
Skype: MrSpotts |
PREREQUISITES:
Completion of TPS High School Latin
1 or equivalent as assessed by TPS instructor.
DESCRIPTOR: This course continues our introduction to reading,
writing, and speaking Latin as a living language. While we learn the many things verbs can do
in sentences, we continue to follow the adventures of an early 2nd century
Roman family in their country house, thus gaining a good deal of insight into
their life and culture. Students
can progress from this course into High School Latin 3, which will begin the
transition to reading unedited ancient Roman authors. The final course in our sequence, High
School Latin 4, reads selected
ancient Roman works which have not been edited for simplicity.
TEXTS: Students will need the Lingua Latina Set
1 which consists of five books, Familia Romana, Latin-English Vocabulary
1, Latine Disco, Exercitia Latina 1, and Grammatica Latina. The Grammatica
Latina text is optional. Parents
will need one copy per family of Lingua
Latina Instructor’s Manual ISBN 1-58510-074-9. These are the same materials required for
High School Latin 1.
Between Classes: Students will have a passage of their
main text to read and understand. Repeated careful reading with complete understanding
is a key to this program, so students will spend the bulk of their study time
in this task. They will also have
one or more exercises to complete. Parents will have an answer key to the
exercises. Beginning in the 2008-09
school year we are testing some interactive Web-based materials with our
students. These materials will walk
students through most or all of the materials they will be experiencing in the
textbook and workbook. As we test
these materials I will ask parents and students to be giving me frequent feedback
on how the system works for them. So there will be a variety of ways we
will pursue learning through this course during this year. While most students
who follow my instructions master the material relatively quickly, some take longer.
You can expect TPS High School
Latin classes to take 60-90 minutes a day, five days a week, outside of class
time.
During Classes: Students are to arrive punctually with
their equipment in good working order. Without a working microphone it will be
very difficult, if not impossible, for the student to participate adequately in
class. This is a course involving a great deal of material to cover each day in
class. Everybody’s preparation and cooperation is necessary to make this
a good course for everyone. Students are not to engage in off-topic chat in the
classroom. I strongly encourage
each parent to sit in on class at least a few times per semester to assist
students in staying on task and to see how their students are interacting in
the context of this class. In each
class session, the instructor will have a review of material assigned for
class, answering questions from students and asking students questions so as to
assess their progress. Then the instructor will introduce and illustrate new
material for the upcoming week's assignment. Participation
is mandatory in order to do well. Students who are absent without a parental excuse or who do
not to participate according to teacher expectations will not receive good
participation scores. If
possible, students should attempt to respond to instructor questions without
reference to their notes, only using their unmarked textbook and exercise book.
This provides real-time review of the material and assists students in bridging
the gap between merely studying a language and becoming fluent in the language.
Of course, students who need their
notes should use their notes. Daily
preparation scores cannot be made up.
Quizzes: There will be a quiz at the end of each
chapter, as well as pop quizzes at various times throughout the year. Late quizzes without a parent request prior to the
quiz due date will have a 10% grade deduction until they are 24 hours late. Items 24-48 hours late will have a 20% deduction.
Items over 48 hours late will
receive a zero. There may be a
final quiz due in the week after the last class meeting.
Grading: While the parent is responsible for
preparing student transcripts, for purposes of this class the instructor will count
evidence of student preparedness, including homework scores and class interaction
as 40% of the grade, quizzes as 60% of the grade. Cut-offs are as follows: 90%
A, 80% B, 70% C, 65% or below F. I would like to set students up for
success. I wish to follow progress on a weekly basis, allowing me to zero in
quickly on areas of student difficulty. I think the exercises combined with
in-class interaction facilitates this wonderfully. In any study of foreign
language, consistency is a key to success. Parents
are responsible to follow-up with the instructor if they have reason to believe
there is anything in error in the gradebook, including scores reported but not
posted. Please retain evidence of submission of and scores on all assignments
until they have posted in the gradebook.