FĀBULAE MĪRĀBILĒS:
CREATING A CLASS STORYLINE IN LATIN I!
Christopher Buczek, Ph.D., ACL Institute 2017, Grand Rapids, MI
E-mail: ; Twitter: @magisterb480
Essential Questions:
- How have I incorporated a student-centered curriculum into my Latin I class?
- How can one “untextbook” while still using a textbook as a basis?
- What are some simple activities one can implement using comprehensible input?
What started this idea?
- Latin I students last year created the Dennis and Debra characters for my Iter Mirabile novella
- ACL Institute 2016 - several presentations on CI
- Express Fluency 2016 - Justin Slocum Bailey’s teacher workshop
- Using Keith Toda and Justin Slocum Bailey’s first story templates, we started the year with “Maximus Gorillam Vult”
- Stressed common verbs: est, vult, habet, it
- Students created the characters and ran with the idea
Full Text and Teaching Materials! / Basic Latin I Unit Structure
- Maximus et Clarissa Chapter
- TPRS, Storyasking
- Story Surveys, questionnaires before each chapter
- Reflections post-reading
- Roman culture story based on the text of Latin for the New Millennium
- Comprehensive Assessment
Basic Plot of Maximus…
- Maximus likes Clarissa, who raises chickens on her father’s farm (in Rome, although it is a very anachronistic and weird alternate Rome)
- The evil Janicknack (named after a student in the class) wants to steal the chickens, because he works at Chick-Fil-A
- Maximus and Clarissa go to war with Janicknack
- Much craziness ensues
- Dictatio
- 4-Word Picture Story
- Read and Draw
- Draw 1-2-3
- Student Questionnaires
- Find the Sentence
- Quis Dīceret? (Who would say?)
- How would they respond?
- Word Chunk Game
- Reading Comprehension Guides
- Limiting vocabulary, not grammar
- As a result, there are several elements of “harder grammar” such as subjunctives, gerundives, participles, etc.
- High-frequency vocabulary is commonly used
- Word order is varied throughout - does not always follow “subject-object-verb” like in many textbook readings
- 313 total lexical items; 3,929 words
PLUSSES/DELTAS
Plusses:
- Generally positive student feedback
- Plot twists kept it engaging and compelling all year long
- Students read nearly 4,000 words of comprehensible Latin
- Unsheltered “harder” grammar
- Hard to limit vocabulary
- Listening was difficult for students
- Creation is time-consuming
- Pop-up grammar lessons could be more efficient
bit.ly/2smEdIa / What about Latin 2 & 3?
LATIN II:
- They read all of Iter Mirabile Dennis et Debrae and made several standalone class stories (Marina et Travis, Ken et Jen, sequels to the Dennis and Debra saga)
- Latin I and II made Character Booklets for their respective stories
- Embedded/tiered readings of authentic texts (Catullus, Martial, Phaedrus, etc.)
- One Word Image stories; Class Storybook Final Project
- Story Listening with mythology and novellas