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LATIN, the Mother of Many Languages
The development of language is a fascinating study. The ancient
Chinese and Egyptians used pictographic languages which took years for the
priests and scholars to master. The common working citizen had no time for such
study and so remained powerless and able to be exploited. About 1500BC the
Phoenicians developed a phonetic alphabet which could be used by the common
merchants to conduct their trading businesses. The Greeks learned it from them
and further developed it by adding vowels. This phonetic alphabet made people
think differently. It encouraged analysis and the development of a whole written
language of interchangeable components. All the languages that developed from
the Latin and Greek root vocabularies function like that. If we don’t teach the
root meaning of those components, we burden our students with the task of
learning thousands of individual English words as wholes. We expect them to
master a vast vocabulary of individual words as if they were Egyptian
hieroglyphics or Chinese characters.
By studying Latin you and your students can master the
components of many languages, including English. Most of the founders of our
country could read both Latin and Greek; and they were able to use the English
language the way a fine craftsman uses his tools. They could write and say what
they meant and, with the power and elegance of their words, they founded this
nation.
The Historical Significance of Latin
Latin is a language which has been the most widely used in all
the world’s history. More than any other language, it has influenced the
languages of Europe and the Americas. Since Latin was the official language of
the government of the Roman Empire, its knowledge and use meant promotion and
social prominence; it thus became the common language of culture as the Empire
spread.
The spread of Christianity throughout the Roman Empire greatly
influenced Latin. Christianity was a religion for all men, rich or poor, and
evangelizing went hand-in-hand with translating. In 390AD, St. Jerome translated
the Bible into the Latin Vulgate (spoken Latin). Now the Vulgar (spoken by the
people) Latin became united with the written language and gave Latin the
strength to survive the collapse of the Empire.
For 400 years the Romans ruled Britain and found it necessary to
build many military camps, which developed into towns. A form of the Latin word
for camp, castra, can
be found in a number of town names: Chester, Manchester, Worcester, Lancaster.
A very important period of influence was after the Norman
conquest of England in 1066. The language of the Normans was an old form of
French, itself descended from Latin. In the course of a few centuries, the
English language underwent striking changes and adopted many French (Latin)
words.
Because Latin for many years had been the language of learned
men, it became the basis of vocabulary of the sciences and law.
There’s a METHOD to the Madness
HOW you teach can be as important as WHAT you teach!
A major difference between The LATIN Road
to English Grammar and other programs is methodology. Methodology is the
study of how we learn, the steps involved in how the brain takes in and puts out
information; actually how we order our minds. The classical method of education
as put forth by Dorothy Sayers in The Lost Tools of
Learning is a method used by men and women centuries ago to teach
efficiently and produce a scholarly education. If you have read The Well Trained Mind by Jessie Wise and Susan Wise
Bauer, you can begin to understand that our minds work more efficiently when we
are taught “from the parts to the whole”
I really understood this methodology when I studied and taught
an intensive phonics course literally teaching “from the parts to the whole.” We
start with the basic letters and basic combinations of letters of English. When
the student learns these he has the basic skills to build words (spell). As he
learns to spell words he reads them and begins connecting them in sentences. And
sentences lead to paragraphs, stories, essays, reports, and research papers. Do
you realize that no other method teaches a student to spell before he reads?
These are the skills we build in my K-4 curriculum The
PHONICS Road to Spelling and Reading.
The LATIN Road to English Grammar follows this methodology of learning, building from the components of the
language to the whole. Many subjects today and for the past several decades have
opted to teach “whole language.” When I took my Spanish in high school we began
memorizing a long conversation during the first week, literally looking at the
whole language of Spanish. By the end of the week we sounded pretty good, and
anyone passing our classroom would think we had a fabulous teacher who could
teach us so quickly. But we did not know what we were saying, nor did we know
what any of the words or phrases meant, much less how they were formed. Our
knowledge was without foundation. Unfortunately, we continued to learn more and
more of these cute, rote conversations and were introduced to the individual
words more slowly. It would have been more efficient to spend time learning the
vocabulary, how words are formed, and the way Spanish is structured as words
relate to each other in sentences. Then we could have taken that information and
BUILT conversations of our own. Instead of having a handful of memorized
conversations in our minds, we could have conversed with anyone about almost
anything. With an intimate knowledge of the parts of the language we could have
made it into the whole. This is what language is about - this is really knowing
the language. A good methodology is important because without it you teach
nothing but a lot of unrelated trivial facts.
Latin Is The Best Educational Investment
A Student Can Make Now For His
Future Years In College
Because many young people going into college do not have a
definite career goal in mind, it is important that they choose a foreign
language which will provide them with the kind of general background that will
help them succeed regardless of their final choice. Which foreign language will
give them the best background? Latin.
Recent studies in Philadelphia, Washington D.C. and Indianapolis
prove that the study of Latin significantly improves verbal skills, mathematical
reasoning powers, and strengths in other academic areas. Also, students who have
taken Latin were recently shown to score higher marks on the SAT than did
students of other languages. Compare these figures:
| |
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Verbal |
Math |
|
| |
National Average |
424 |
466 |
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| |
Latin Students |
558 |
585 |
|
| |
French Students |
540 |
566 |
|
| |
Spanish Students |
497 |
536 |
|
| |
Hebrew Students |
544 |
572 |
|
| |
Russian Students |
518 |
595 |
|
| |
German Students |
538 |
581 |
|
As you can see, Latin students score higher on this test than do
students of any other language. They score 134 points
above average in Verbal and 119 points above average in Math.
Since a student may not know which specific language will be
required in college, Latin is ideal because it prepares him for all of them. The
Romance languages- Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian are all
descended directly from Latin. Because of Latin’s total reliance on word endings
to convey sentence structure, its study also makes it easier to learn German and
Russian, languages which still rely on the use of such word endings.
The benefits of Latin have been related to these frequently
mentioned career areas:
Law: As western world law is
steeped in Roman jurisprudence, so is legal vocabulary steeped in Latin. Such
terms as prima facie, habeas corpus, nolo contendere, corpus delicti, and amicus
curiae are part of the everyday Latin vocabulary of practicing lawyers.
Medicine: For over a thousand years the language of
medicine was Latin. Today, a knowledge of Latin can provide a pre-med student or
student nurse with the winning advantage in extremely competitive medical school
studies.
Pharmacy: Like medicine, pharmacy is also steeped
in Latin terms and phrases - terms and phrases a student will not have to spend
precious college time memorizing like the not-so-lucky fellow students who have
not studied Latin earlier.
Ministry: Latin, together with Greek and Hebrew, is
the language of Judaeo-Christian thought and tradition. Every serious student of
the New Testament eventually studies Greek so that the New Testament can be read
in the original language. A knowledge of Latin will make the mastery of Greek
infinitely easier.
Journalism: The ability to communicate with an
extensive vocabulary and a thorough command of English is essential to success
in journalism. The contribution of Latin to these skills is immeasureable.
Archeology: To become a working archeologist
specializing in the ancient civilizations of Greece and Rome, a student will
find a reading knowledge of Latin and Greek to be as indispensable as the tools
he will use for field excavation.
Linguistics: If a student enters the field of
linguistics - the study of how languages work - he will find that Latin is one
of the most significant of all the Indo-European tomgues.
Ancient History: To be a serious student of ancient
history in college, a student will have to be able to read in original sources -
sources written in Latin and Greek. The cost of having such original sources
translated for him can run as high as $20.00 per page.
Teaching: In case a student is interested in
becoming a teacher of any subject, a study of Latin will equip him with a depth
of understanding that will be invaluable to him in his own classroom.
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