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E-raamat: Teaching Latin: Contexts, Theories, Practices

(University of Cambridge, UK)
  • Formaat: 240 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Mar-2022
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781350161405
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: 240 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Mar-2022
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781350161405

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Building on and updating some of the issues addressed in Starting to Teach Latin, Steven Hunt provides a guide for novice and more experienced teachers of Latin in schools and colleges, who work with adapted and original Latin prose texts from beginners' to advanced levels. It draws extensively on up-to-date theories of second language development and on multiple examples of the practices of real teachers and students. Hunt starts with a detailed look at deductive, inductive and active teaching methods, which support teachers in making the best choices for their students' needs and for their own personal preferences, but goes on to organise the book around the principles of listening, reading, speaking and writing Latin. It is designed to be informative, experimental and occasionally provocative. The book closes with two chapters of particular contemporary interest: 'Access, Diversity and Inclusion' investigates how the subject community is meeting the challenge of teaching Latin more equitably in today's schools; and 'The Future' offers some thoughts on lessons that have been learnt from the experiences of online teaching practices during the Covid-19 lockdowns.

Practical examples, extensive references and a companion website at www.stevenhuntclassics.com are included. Teachers of Latin will find this book an invaluable tool inside and outside of the classroom.

Arvustused

This exciting new book from Latin pedagogy scholar Steven Hunt will be a must-read for Latin teachers and those who train them. Informed by the latest theory and practice, Hunts accessible and engaging volume admirably supports teachers in the task of making the best choices for how they teach. -- Ronnie Ancona, Professor of Classics, Hunter College, USA This is the book I wish I had when I first started teaching Latin! It outlines current practices in Latin pedagogy while providing up to date books, teaching examples, and resources. I will be using this book in my graduate courses! -- Maureen Lamb, Teacher of Classics, Kingswood Oxford School, USA This is the go-to book for an up-to-date picture of the classics educational landscape and for good advice on how to make it better. Steven Hunt has been in the forefront of developments, and the richness of his personal experience and well-informed wisdom is clear on every page. -- Christopher Pelling, Regius Professor of Greek emeritus, University of Oxford, UK

Muu info

The sequel to Starting to Teach Latin with an emphasis on the application of modern and traditional approaches to learning classical languages in the school classroom.
Acknowledgements viii
Introduction 1(10)
Notes
7(1)
References
8(3)
1 Latin Language Teaching and Learning
11(34)
Teaching methods
11(5)
Teaching grammar
16(3)
Vocabulary learning
19(6)
Translation
25(2)
Comprehension questions
27(6)
Duolingo: A new way to learn Latin?
33(2)
Notes
35(3)
References
38(7)
2 Listening
45(18)
Hearing Latin is easy
45(1)
The phonological loop and its role in memory
45(4)
Dictation activities
49(2)
Listening for comprehensible input
51(6)
Music and singing
57(1)
Notes
58(1)
References
58(5)
3 Reading
63(48)
Reading and not reading Latin
63(2)
Strategies for reading
65(2)
Thinking about the text
67(7)
Tiered readings
74(4)
Making an original text more comprehensible
78(7)
Narrow reading
85(2)
Linear reading: Read like a Roman
87(1)
Free Voluntary Reading (FVR)
88(12)
Notes
100(2)
References
102(9)
4 Speaking
111(14)
Why speaking?
111(3)
Activities for speaking Latin
114(3)
Corrective feedback
117(3)
Where to learn
120(1)
Reading resources
120(5)
5 Writing
125(40)
Writing Latin
125(1)
Prose composition in the UK
126(15)
Intermission: Prose composition to free composition
141(1)
Models of practice
142(3)
Free composition
145(6)
Feedback
151(1)
A role for fan fiction?
152(4)
Notes
156(1)
References
157(8)
6 Access, Diversity and Inclusion
165(26)
The challenges
165(1)
Access to Latin
166(2)
Diversity and inclusion
168(4)
Teachable moments
172(1)
Improving Latin coursebooks
173(2)
Arguments about pedagogy
175(2)
Usualizing diversity
177(1)
Conclusion
177(1)
Resources
177(2)
Notes
179(2)
References
181(10)
7 The Future: Is It Digital?
191(22)
CALL and AL-CALL
191(2)
Collaborative digital learning
193(1)
Flipped classrooms: Has their time come?
193(1)
Making it multimodal: The end of the book?
194(1)
Digital translations, assessment and feedback
195(2)
Personalization and student voice
197(1)
Innovation or replication?
197(1)
Visualizations, computer games and virtual worlds
198(3)
Online affinity groups
201(1)
Publications, conferences and blogs
202(1)
Conclusion
203(2)
Notes
205(1)
References
206(7)
Appendix 1 Abbreviations 213(2)
Appendix 2 Resources 215(6)
Appendix 3 UK/US Education Systems Compared 221(4)
Index 225
Steven Hunt is Subject Lecturer of the PGCE in Classics at the University of Cambridge, UK. He has taught Classics for over twenty years in state comprehensive schools and is author of Starting to Teach Latin (Bloomsbury Academic, 2016), and co-editor of Teaching Classics with Technology (Bloomsbury Academic, 2019), Forward with Classics (Bloomsbury Academic, 2018) and Communicative Approaches for Ancient Languages (Bloomsbury Academic, 2021). He is Editor of the Journal of Classics Teaching, contributes regularly to CPD events internationally, and is a consultant and trainer for the UK charity Classics for All.