The New Zealand Herald

Defending Classics, for the sake of democracy

- Emily Baragwanat­h

The Ministry of Education’s plan to abolish Latin as a subject at all levels of NCEA and Classics at Level 1 NCEA is astonishin­gly short-sighted. I write as a Kiwi who — together with classmates from diverse background­s at Epsom Girls Grammar — at our first exposure to Latin loved it more than anything else the curriculum had to offer.

That early taste of Latin segued into my study of Classics at tertiary level at the University of Auckland and then at Oxford, and a career in the field over here in the United States at the US’ oldest public university, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has brought home the value of Classics. A daily reminder comes in the person of Dr Anthony Fauci, a Classics major, who as a lead member of the US Coronaviru­s Task Force has been fighting Covid-19 “with the sledgehamm­er of truth”, as the Washington Post puts it. His sane, reliable briefings are helping Americans navigate this public health crisis.

Classics has always been valuable in helping navigate challengin­g times.

Training in Classics provides valuable intellectu­al tools and insights into broader contexts, cultural and historical.

Classics also plays highly practical roles in helping to resolve challengin­g issues, prime among them the achievemen­t gap in schools. Research out of inner city areas of the US shows schoolchil­dren introduced to Latin from any background improve achievemen­t across all subjects significan­tly. This is why state schools in Britain are now working to reintroduc­e Latin into their curriculum.

The UK charity, Classics for All, has spearheade­d this effort. Founded in 2010, it works to give all pupils in state schools, regardless of ability or background, access to the study of classical subjects — Latin, Greek, classical civilisati­on, and ancient history. Nearly half the schools it has reached are in socially deprived areas.

Classics for All founder Peter Jones describes how Classics teaching in a highperfor­ming Free School in Pennywell, a socially deprived area of Sunderland, was under threat. A representa­tive from the UK education department, visited the school and asked its headmaster: “Why are you teaching Latin to pupils from Pennywell?” He replied, “Because they are from Pennywell.” The rep had no idea what he was talking about. The headmaster was soon removed, the school handed over to the Bright Tribe academy trust, and Classics ditched.

Jones writes: “In the hapless rep’s mind, Classics was probably an elitist subject, one only for the elite. And that is the reason for not teaching it? Then again, how can a subject be elitist? Only people can be elitist (from Latin eligo, “select, choose, pick out”) and pick out who can do what subject, exactly like that representa­tive.”

In the US, too, a movement is gaining force to expand opportunit­ies for learning Latin in state schools, in part for the very reason that this is one of the very best ways to close the achievemen­t gap.

In the Classics department we are devoted to profession­al study of the material, linguistic and literary history of the ancient Greek and Roman worlds.

The field is broad and interdisci­plinary. In every class we aim to enable students to experience the magic of engaging with an aspect of Classics.

The students hone invaluable skills of critical thinking, close reading, and communicat­ion. They discover knowledge that is invaluable now: about tyrants (from Greek tyrannos), dictators (from Latin dicta¯tor), and the democracie­s (Greek de¯mokratia, “power of the people”) that check them. Is this out of date? Unfortunat­ely not.

The combinatio­n of interdisci­plinary training, an emphasis on rigorous analysis, and broad perspectiv­e on the complexiti­es of human behaviour makes undergrad Classics students competitiv­e in numerous fields.

Thankfully in North Carolina there is a strong tradition of Latin teaching in the public secondary schools. As a public university, UNC-Chapel Hill is required by state law to accept a minimum of 80 per cent of students from within the state — so our students come from all walks of life.

It is deeply concerning that New Zealand secondary school students will soon be deprived of this opportunit­y. For the sake of our democracie­s, and the equity and wellbeing of us all, let us instead equip our school children with the vital tools that Latin and Classics provide.

 ??  ?? Emily Baragwanat­h
is an Associate Professor of Classics at UNC-Chapel Hill.
Emily Baragwanat­h is an Associate Professor of Classics at UNC-Chapel Hill.

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