View Article  Where did Classics go?
From Campus Times.

Where did Classics go?
Amy Weintraub
Issue date: 9/21/06 Section: Features

Hesiod, Plato, Aristotle, Plutarch, Homer - ...   more »
View Article  Quote this
This is not just another 'look how they do it in the USA' piece. It has a wealth of points worth quoting to your pupils and their parents.   more »
View Article  'Iris' the new magazine - further coverage
At Cheney School, Latin teacher Julian Armistead said the language was coming back into fashion and about 70 students were now taking it. The first lesson at AS-Level started this week.   more »
View Article  Please read your Journal of Classics Teaching - and act!
The JACT/ARLT publication The Journal of Classics Teaching smiled up at me from my doormat this morning - four comic masks decorate the front cover.

But what's inside is serious and important.   more »
View Article  'Quiet revival' for Latin
LATIN appears to be enjoying a quiet revival in Britain’s secondary schools. Teachers and classicists across England have noted a dramatic rise in the numbers of children starting secondary school who are expressing an interest in the subject.   more »
View Article  What the EU will be doing this month - in Latin
Conventus biduanus Consilii ECOFIN permultas res tractabit, in quibus erunt status hodiernus oeconomiae globalis et prospectus futuri, stabilitas mercatuum fiscalium et evolutio institutionalis Fundi Monetarii Internationalis (IMF).   more »
View Article  British state schools please copy
"I just can't wait for the new knowledge to flow into my head," Noah said as he played with his best friend, Skylar Lovett, 10, who will attend the school, too.   more »
View Article  Three pages on Cicero in The Sunday Times.
The Sunday Times has been lavish in its coverage of Imperium, a novel about Cicero by Robert Harris.   more »
View Article  Call for Latin to be the official EU langiage
"Using Latin is a way of paying tribute to European civilisation and it serves to remind people of European society’s roots, stretching back to ancient times," explained Mia Lahti, editor of the Finnish presidency’s website.

"Latin isn't dead – it’s still very much in use in different forms across the world today. After all, Italians, French and Spaniards all speak a new form of Latin."   more »
View Article  Iris is out soon
The new Classics magazine designed to stir interest in the Classics in maintained schools will be out on 18th September.   more »