Homeschooling Today magazine
Reviewed by Terri Fisher
OMESCHOOLERS TODAY HAVE A PLETHORA OF choices when it comes to
Latin curriculum.
Gone are the days when you would order
something from a small private-school publisher only
to find out there was no teacher's manual because
the teachers were Latin scholars who didn't need a
manual! Today's
homeschooling parents can teach and learn right
along with their students thanks to many homeschool
and Christian school teachers who have developed the
tools we need for the task.
Latin
in the Christian Trivium (XL Group, 1989,
www.latintrivium.com) was written by two experienced
homeschool moms who learned Latin themselves in
order to teach it to their own children.
After completing that task, they taught many
other students as well, all the while perfecting
their method of instruction.
Some
would ask, "Why teach Latin?"
Simply put, it increases a child's
vocabulary, comprehension, and grammatical
understanding.
In fact, studies have shown that learning
Latin increases academic performance across the
board. It
is a great launching pad for learning any of the
Romance languages, and the transition to learning
Greek or Hebrew is said to be easier after Latin has
been mastered.
To teach your
child Latin, you need a well-planned,
well-organized, scholarly, comprehensive curriculum.
If you are an average homeschool parent, Latin was
not a part of your education, so you need to learn
right along with your student.
That is exactly what you can do with
confidence using Latin in the Christian Trivium..
There are
three volumes currently available. Student texts,
teacher's guides, audio tapes, and activity books
are all priced separately with some combinations for
a discount. By the end of the third year in this
program, your child will have completed the
equivalent of three years of high school Latin. If
you follow the recommendations of Mrs. Harrington
and Mrs. Busby and start Latin in the fifth grade,
you will still have four years of school left in
which to pursue additional language courses or
further Latin studies at the college level.
The
method of teaching in this curriculum is based
somewhat on the Principle Approach which teaches by
"Research, Reason, Relate, and Record". It
is a "line upon line, precept upon
precept" method. Each child and his teacher
will develop a three-inch binder full of
definitions, charts, exercises, poetry, maps, etc.
It will be a resource for a lifetime. Each
child also creates his own set of flash cards for
his vocabulary studies. All of the writing
reinforces the information being taught, making
mastery of the subject very thorough. Your child
will also be gaining a deeper understanding of
English grammar as translation of Latin text ensues.
Unlike
most other Latin curricula, this one is based on
Scripture. The translations are taken primarily from
the Latin Vulgate.
Roman culture is explored through an ongoing
story about the life of Christ that features a Roman
family, as well as some readings from classical
authors.
Another
exceptional aspect to this curriculum is its
biblical worldview. For instance, your children will
learn the attributes of God, why God's law still has
relevance, and many other meaty truths. They will
view the entire New Testament unfolding
realistically and historically in the context of the
Roman occupation of Israel—all this while learning
declensions, conjugations, cases, and, by the end of
the third book, a Latin vocabulary that exceeds a
thousand words.
The method is
sound, the content is deep, and the authors have
managed to put some fun into the mastering of Latin.
I do not think you will be disappointed in the
results if you choose to use Latin in the
Christian Trivium.