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A
Dead Language That’s Very Much Alive
From
the recent article in the New York Times:
By Winnie Hu
Published: October 6, 2008
NEW
ROCHELLE, N.Y. — The Latin class at Isaac E. Young
Middle School here was reading a story the other day
with a familiar ring: Boy annoys girl, girl scolds
boy. Only in this version, the characters were named
Sextus and Cornelia, and they argued in Latin. “I
can relate, but what ... are they saying?” said
Xavier Peña, a sixth grader who started studying
Latin in September.
Enrollment
in Latin classes here in this Westchester County
suburb has increased by nearly one-third since 2006,
to 187 of the district’s 10,500 students, and the
two middle schools in town are starting an
ancient-cultures club in which students will explore
the lives of Romans, Greeks and others.
The
resurgence of a language once rejected as outdated and
irrelevant is reflected across the country as Latin is
embraced by a new generation of students like Xavier
who seek to increase SAT scores or stand out from
their friends, The number of students in the United
States taking the National Latin Exam has risen
steadily to more than 134,000 students in each of the
past two years, from 124,000 in 2003 and 101,000 in
1998, with large increases in remote parts of the
country like New Mexico, Alaska and Vermont.
The
number of students taking the Advanced Placement test
in Latin, meanwhile, has nearly doubled over the past
10 years, to 8,654 in 2007. While Spanish and French
still dominate student schedules — and Chinese and
Arabic are trendier choices — Latin has quietly
flourished in many high-performing suburbs, like New
Rochelle, where Latin’s virtues are sung by
superintendents and principals who took it in their
day. In neighboring Pelham, the 2,750-student district
just hired a second full-time Latin teacher after a
four-year search, learning that scarce Latin teachers
have become more sought-after than ever.
On Long
Island, the Jericho district is offering an Advanced
Placement course in Latin for the first time this year
after its Latin enrollment rose to 120 students, a 35
percent increase since 2002.
In
nearby Great Neck, 36 fifth graders signed up last
year for before- and after-school Latin classes that
were started by a 2008 graduate who has moved on to
study classics at Stanford (that student’s brother
and a friend will continue to lead the Latin classes
this year).
Latin
is also thriving in New York City, where it is
currently taught in about three dozen schools,
including Brooklyn Latin, a high school in East
Williamsburg that started in 2006. Four years of
Latin, and two of Spanish, are required at the new
high school, where Latin phrases adorn the walls and
words like discipuli (students), magistri (teachers)
and latrina (bathroom) are sprinkled into everyday
conversation.
“It’s
the language of scholars and educated people,” said
Jason Griffiths, headmaster of Brooklyn Latin. “It’s
the language of people who are successful. I think it’s
a draw, and that’s certainly what we sell.”
Adam D.
Blistein, executive director of the American
Philological Association at the University of
Pennsylvania, which represents more than 3,000
members, including classics professors and Latin
teachers, said that more high schools were recognizing
the benefits of Latin. It builds vocabulary and
grammar for higher SAT scores, appeals to college
admissions officers as a sign of critical-thinking
skills and fosters true intellectual passion, he said.
“Goethe
is better in German, Flaubert is better in French and
Virgil is better in Latin,” Dr. Blistein said. “If
you stick with it, the lollipop comes at the end when
you get to read the original. In many cases, it’s
what whets their appetite.”
Latin
was once required at many public and parochial
schools, but fell into disfavor during the 1960s when
students rebelled against traditional classroom
teachings and even the Roman Catholic Church moved
away from Latin as the official language of Mass.
Interest in Latin was revived somewhat in the 1970s
and began picking up in the 1980s with the
back-to-basics movement in many schools, according to
Latin scholars, but really took off in the last few
years as a language long seen as a stodgy ivory tower
secret infiltrated popular culture.
Marty
Abbott, education director of the American Council on
the Teaching of Foreign Languages, said it was
possible that Latin would edge out German as the third
most popular language taught in schools, behind
Spanish and French, when the preliminary results of an
enrollment survey are released next year. In the last
survey, covering enrollment in 2000, Latin placed
fourth. “In people’s minds, it’s coming back,”
she said. “But it’s always been there. It’s just
that we continue to see interest in it.”
Students
like Ciera Gardner, a sophomore, started Latin three
years ago with two friends who have since dropped out
because of the workload. But Ciera, an aspiring
actress, said that she had persisted because Latin
would look good on her college applications and that
in the meantime, it had already helped her decipher
unfamiliar words while reading scripts. “It’s
different,” she said. “Everyone says ‘I take
Spanish’ or ‘I take Italian,’ but it’s cool to
say ‘I take Latin.’ ”
Max
Gordon, another sophomore, said that he had learned
more about grammar in Latin class than in English
class. And he occasionally debates the finer points of
grammar with his other, Kit Fitzgerald, a video artist
who studied Latin, while washing dishes after dinner.
“In
some ways, it’s really frustrating,” he said. “I’ll
hear someone say something that isn’t grammatically
correct and I’ll cringe.”
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