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Learning Latin With First Form Latin



I had wanted my oldest to begin Latin this year.   We have just finished our study of Ancient Greece, and have been hearing a lot about Latin.  We are also studying for a spelling bee - learning Latin would be perfect!

Fortunately, one of our TOS Crew reviews turned out to be Memoria Press' First Form Latin.   If you are looking for a well planned, concise, easy to follow Latin program for your older student (grades 5 and up) you might want to investigate First Form Latin.  



The focus of the First Form Series is the Latin grammar and a small, usable vocabulary...  Weekly quizzes, cumulative tests, flashcards, an audio, and DVD provide the teacher or homeschooler with everything needed to be successful.   

The first thing that struck me about this program was that I did not have to be able to teach Latin!   The program is designed so that I could learn Latin alongside my daughter.  Yes, it is a rigorous program, and yes, at first it looks quite daunting.   Once we took the time to fully explore the program, however, we discovered you are given EVERY SINGLE THING you need to succeed.   

The program can be used with just an individual student, or it can be taught to a class of students.  The instructional text offers suggestions for teaching it both ways. 

Memoria says that First Form Latin is unique because:

*It is committed to the trivium model of teaching grammar systematically in order to facilitate retention and understanding, rather than topically, to facilitate translation.

*Extensive workbook exercises ensure skills mastery and rapid recognition of inflected forms.  

I know my daughter appreciated the way the materials spoke directly to HER - this is from the opening letter to students and parents in the student text:

There are so many benefits to learning Latin, it is difficult to know where to start.  I truly believe that Latin has more educational value than any other subject you can study. Here are a few things you will learn from Latin - the roots of English words, the roots of Western Civilization, how to think critically and logically, how to analyze, contrast, and compare, how to understand language, grammar, and words with a depth unknown to those who have never had the privilege of studying Latin.....    It is a privilege to study Latin, and I encourage you to work hard and make the most of this opportunity and every opportunity that comes to you in life.   

What is included in First Form Latin?    We received:

  • Teacher Manual
  • Student Text
  • Student Workbook
  • Quizzes and Tests
  • Pronunciation Audio CD
  • Flashcards
  • Instructional DVDs  (want to see a sample of the DVD??   Visit Memoria's website!)
*The complete package can be purchased for $115.00.  

Each of these items can be purchased separately, or together.  Memoria has the pricing clearly laid out on their website.  

What will your child learn in First Form Latin?


Grammar forms and vocabulary are the emphasis in this text.   It can be a beginning Latin program for ANYONE ages 5th grade and up, or it can be a follow up to Latina Christina I at any age.    See the contents of the program here.  


You can view a sample lesson from the student lesson book here, and a sample from the teacher's book here.   The teacher's book includes an exact replica of the student book, with additional notes.  I could easily refer my daughter to the page we were on and know exactly what she was seeing in her book.  I LIKED THIS!   






What were our impressions?

  • This is not a program where you can expect to pop in the DVD and have your child learn Latin on their own!  You should be there with them; you are also the student.   Perhaps an older student could use this program by themselves, but I needed to be there learning alongside my daughter.  


  • Initially it seemed quite difficult, and I do believe that fifth grade would be the youngest you would start a beginner. We had no prior Latin experience.   My fifth grader is a bit overwhelmed with the pace right now (there are a lot of workbook exercises, but I can see how this repetition leads to MASTERY), but each lesson gets a little easier.

  • The DVD instruction was quite helpful.   The instructor (Glen Moore) was funny, easy to understand, and moved at a pretty good pace (although the pause button was our friend in the beginning!).  I was having trouble with some of the recitations, but following the DVD was immensely helpful.  We also found the same to be true with the audio CD.  If you are expecting bells and whistles in the DVD, there are none.  I believe this is in keeping with the rigorous expectations of learning Latin.  

  • We took a 45 minute chunk for each of the lessons.  (We committed to three lessons each week... and will continue this after our review.)   I worked on a white board, while my daughter worked in the workbook.   There were 4-6 pages of workbook exercises per lesson.  I LOVED the fact that answers were clearly given in the Teacher Manual!    

  • The predictability and consistency make this program effective.  Students memorize by reciting aloud, and also writing several times.  It is rigorous, but makes perfect sense.  

  • Latin is not for the faint of heart.  If you are going to study Latin and use this program, be prepared to COMMIT to learning the language and spending time doing so.  

  • The rewards of learning Latin are HUGE!  I feel  this is rounding out our classical education; it gives us a deeper understanding of words and their roots, and encourages my daughter to think more scholarly.  

If you'd like to find out more, please read my crew mates' reviews at the Crew Blog.  


Disclaimer: I received the above named product from TOS Crew in return for my honest review. I have not been compensated in any other form. 
   

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NYC, Turning 40, and Other Reflections from the Past Week!

Being away with just my husband this past week was such a welcome change.   Yes, I LOVE my life homeschooling my children.  I wouldn't change a thing.   It's nice every so often, however, to get AWAY and see what life is like somewhere else.   It's good to explore.   It's good to take some time for just you and your spouse.   It's good to have time with friends.




As I approach my 40th birthday next week, I've been doing a lot of thinking.   When I saw this picture my husband took of me at Rockefeller Center I immediately thought, "I look so tired", and then I felt proud of that tiredness.   It is the sign of a busy, fulfilling life.  The wrinkles around my eyes and on my forehead are signs I am getting older AND wiser.   I like getting older, actually.


I don't want to forget all the thoughts I had this past week; I thought it would be fitting to share my thoughts from my time away.   


 I have wonderful homeschooling friends!  
My two dear friends kept my children while I was away.  They loved them like their own and took such good care of them.  Right after we left GMan had a fever and stuffy nose... he got a lot of TLC from my friends Rhonda and Hope.

 There is so much more to the world than my little corner of it.  
Seeing the site of the 9/11 attacks and visiting St. Paul's Chapel was sobering.   As I read letters from children thanking the firemen on that day I wept.  Signs of 9/11 were all over NYC, and  I got a true sense of what it must have been like for New Yorkers on that day.   If you ever have the chance to visit New York City you must - for this one reason alone.

St. Paul's Chapel:    


The Fireman's Prayer (near Rockefeller Center):

I love my husband more now than I did when we married fifteen years ago. 
We had not been away together in four years.  (I could kick myself for not getting a picture of the two of us!)  We really need to go away together more often.  One evening we ate at a fabulous restaurant;  sitting on a roof in Manhattan eating good food and drinking wine is a great thing.  We talked about our blessings and what an amazing life we have.   I am in awe of the man God chose for me seventeen years ago.   I never could have predicted I would be a stay at home mom, submitting to my husband, and homeschooling my children.  Isn't it fortunate for me that God knows and guides our path?  

Something as simple as waking up leisurely, drinking coffee, reading the paper, and chatting with my husband is a luxury for me.  At home, he is leaving our house at 5 a.m. - and I'm certainly not up and coherent at that time!  I am thankful we had a few mornings to do this.   Even though he was attending a conference for work, we squeezed in a lot of time together.  He came back to the hotel one evening after a long day - it was (I thought) time for bed, but he wanted me to go down to the hotel bar and relax and have a drink.   Wow - we hadn't done something like that since our "younger" days... I loved it!

Blogging Friends Can Turn Into Dear Real Life Friends!
I spent one entire day with Melissa and Theresa.   I can't tell you what fun we had, and how blessed I was by their company.   Melissa and I met in Rockefeller Center and shopped for a few hours before lunch.  At lunch Theresa met us and we continued the fun for another three hours!   I don't know where the time went, but I do know there was a lot of laughing and sharing.   Two bottles (yes, I did say TWO) of wine later, feeling stuffed from fabulous Italian food, we headed out to explore NY a little more.  After strolling through the market at Grand Central Station, we said goodbye to Melissa and she led us in prayer.  This was so powerful for me -- I am connected to these ladies in a deep way.  

Later, after exploring The New York City Library and St. Patrick's Cathedral, I said goodbye to Theresa.   I went back to my hotel and collapsed after a great day.   God is good.  

My camera phone didn't do too great, but this is Melissa and I... she is gregarious, fun, and genuinely warm.  Melissa was one of my very first blogging friends/encouragers.  You probably know her from The Joys of Home Educating.  


Our lunch... and dessert.  It was delicious - probably the best Italian I've ever eaten.  
  

My fellow Thinking Mother, Theresa.  We had video chatted before, and meeting her in person was a dream come true.  I felt like we had known each other for years.  She took tons of wonderful pictures, which I'm sure she will be posting at her blog, Magnolia Lane.  



The truly miraculous thing about this trip (and if you ask my husband this he would agree 110%) is that I did not try to control any aspect of the trip. 
 Normally, I am a pretty uptight traveller - stressing out at the airport, second guessing my husband as he reads the map of where we are going - you know the type.  I was raised to be an independent, strong, woman, and sometimes putting that on the back burner is VERY hard for me.  


I honestly PRAYED the week before our trip that I would be able to let go and let my husband take charge and just enjoy the journey.   My prayers were answered IN ABUNDANCE!  I let my husband take the lead on everything and I know this made his trip so much more enjoyable.  What man doesn't feel good when his wife trusts and respects him?


Everything went off without a hitch for our trip... from the kids having a great time with friends to on time and smooth flights.  The only not so good thing was our cab driver hitting a pedestrian on our way home one evening.   No worries - the pedestrian wasn't hurt (just stunned!) and we felt like we were in the middle of a Seinfeld episode!  


It's good I got this practice traveling, because we will be going to San Francisco  in just two weeks.  And this time we're taking the kids!   It is a year of 40th birthdays, 15th wedding anniversaries, 10th birthdays, and so many more milestones.  We want to celebrate them and make lots of memories!  










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