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WHY
LATIN?
Newnan Classical School begins instruction of the Latin language
during the Kindergarten year and continues this process throughout
each grade level. Many ask, Why Latin. This is addressed in the
following piece written by Peter H. Vande Brake, Head of North
Hills Classical Academy, North Hills, Michigan.
Latin is an important language to learn for many reasons, but
especially because it helps to increase linguistic skills and
understanding, and it teaches students a method of learning that
will help them with any subject they want to study.
Contrary to popular thought, Latin is not really a dead language;
it is just hidden well in other languages that go by different
names. Over 80% of the English language comes from Latin and
Greek roots. Over 50% of English comes from strictly Latin roots.
English vocabulary tests reveal that students of Latin score
higher than students of other foreign languages. When a student
studies Latin first, any language he or she chooses to study
next will be much easier, especially if it is one of the Romance
languages (Spanish, French, Romanian, Italian, and Portuguese)
because they derive as much as 90% of their vocabulary from Latin.
Another important reason to learn Latin is that it helps you
to understand the culture of the western world better. Language
is the circulatory system of a culture. If you want to really
understand a culture, you have to learn its language. Without
a mastery of the language of a culture, you will never understand
completely how it thinks or how it works. A proper study of Latin
includes elements of mythology, Roman culture, law, poetry, literature,
and history. If we want to comprehend our own culture, we must
understand where we have come from. The Latin language dominated
Western culture for well over 1,000 years. All scholarly writing
was done in Latin regardless of the author's native tongue. The
Latin Vulgate was the most common translation of the Bible for
centuries. The Catholic church held on to the Latin translation
of the Bible well into the 20th century. For these reasons, Latin
helps to make one culturally literate. America is, in large part,
the product of Western culture--a product of the Graeco-Roman
world with Judeo-Christian influences.
The main characteristic that makes Latin such a valuable language
for linguistic understanding and methodical learning is that
Latin is an inflected language--that is the nouns in the language
are declined. There is a nominative case that is equivalent to
our subject of a sentence in English, there is a genitive case
that signifies possession, there is a dative case that acts as
an indirect object, there is an accusative case that acts as
a direct object, and there is an ablative case that takes on
several different grammatical functions.
The
English language signifies these different grammatical functions
by word order. In Latin, and other inflected languages, the words
can be in any order in which the author chooses to put them;
the function of the words in a sentence is determined by the
endings on the nouns. Thus, the study of Latin depends on a good
understanding of the way language works. To understand Latin
one must also understand the syntax and grammar of language.
The study of Latin will improve the grammar skills of the student
in both their native language and in Latin.
Because Latin is a precise and systematic language, it trains
the mind to learn in a systematic way. You move from the building
blocks of the language, namely vocabulary, syntax, and semantics
to mastery of the language and translation of complex passages
and grammatical structures. It was the study of Latin and Greek
that gave impetus to the initiation of the Trivium. To learn
Latin, you have to learn the basic parts of the language and
then learn how those parts fit together into intelligible sentences
and then learn how to put the sentences together into paragraphs
and finally into stories or arguments or some other kind of communication.
In Medieval times, students would learn Latin grammar and then
read the classic Latin texts. These texts would cover history,
philosophy, science, logic, math, rhetoric, mythology, and theology.
The study of each of these subjects would spring naturally from
the study of Latin.
The precision of the Latin language also requires the student
to hone the skills of observation, comparison, and generalization.
Small differences between words will change the function or the
meaning of the words entirely. So the student of Latin will have
to cultivate an eye for detail. This ability is useful in other
disciplines such as science. In the early 20th century, the great
German chemist, Bauer, was asked by one of his colleagues whether
his best students came from the Real-Schulen (a modern school
where chemistry was taught as a subject) or from the Gymnasien
(a traditional liberal arts school where Latin grammar was stressed).
The assumption being that the best science students would come
from the Real-Schulen.
Bauer replied, My best students come from the Gymnasien. The
students from the Real-Schulen do best at first; but after three
months work here, they are, as a rule, left behind by those coming
from the Gymnasien. The colleague wondered at this because the
Real-Schulen students had been especially instructed in chemistry.
Yes, he replied; but the students from the Gymnasien have the
best trained minds. Give me a student who has been taught his
Latin grammar, and I will answer for his chemistry (Kelsey, Latin
and Greek in American Education, New York, NY: Macmillan, 1911,
p. 24, as quoted in Douglas Wilson, ed., Repairing the Ruins,
Moscow, Idaho Canon Press, 1996, 135).
Thus, the reasons, we teach Latin at North Hills are many. It
may not be a spoken language anymore, but that certainly does
not mean that it is not useful. It not only teaches students
a higher level of linguistic competency, but it also trains the
mind in the skills that are needed for systematic learning of
any subject. This fact, more than any other, makes Latin one
of the most valuable learning experiences a student can have.
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