Grade Six Latin/Language
Arts Program
by Nicholas Naso
Classics as a Cross-Curricular Core
in the Middle School
Austin Preparatory School
Objectives
- To introduce and reinforce English grammar
simultaneously with Latin grammar. Example: introduction of recognizing
a direct object in both languages.
- To introduce and practice the skill of
determining the meaning of English words based on their Latin
roots.
- To provide an opportunity for the integration
of various subjects around a common theme.
- To demonstrate how to go about studying
a foreign language.
Textbooks
Latin: Ecce Romani (Longman).
Language Arts: Exercises in English (Loyola University
Press).
Mythology: D'Aulaire's Book of Greek Myths.
Software: Roots
of English: an Etymological Dictionary
Suggestions for others wanting to use
Latin as a core
- Set aside time to discuss and plan integration
of subjects with your colleagues. This takes a lot of time.
- Choose a story-based textbook with characters
students will care about. This will help them want to learn the
grammar needed to unlock the meaning of the stories.
- Before you teach a grammatical concept,
present it in English. For example, students can practice locating
direct objects in English sentences and then a day or two later,
they will be ready to locate them in Latin. I have found that
students pay closer attention to the English grammar lessons,
because they know that in a couple of days, they will be meeting
and dealing with the Latin counterpart.
- Work frequently with derivation study.
Parents love it when their children can tell them what a word
means because they know its Latin root.
- Show students how Latin is the root of
the Romance languages studied in your school. If they elect to
take these languages, they may remember the Latin roots of some
of the words and see the value of Latin to the learning of a
modern language.
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