Course Syllabus
Course Description
Greek 102 continues a basic overview of the Attic dialect of the ancient Greek language, including high frequency vocabulary and fundamental grammar. Students will not only read and write but also listen and speak in Attic Greek.
Language Skills Objectives
- Adjectives
-
- Comparative and Superlative Degrees
- Adverbs
-
- Comparative and Superlative Degrees
- Verbs
-
- Voice: Active, Middle, and Passive
- Aspect: Simple vs Continuous
- Tense: Past, Present, and Future
- Specific Tense-Aspect Combinations:
- Continuous
- Present Finite ("Present Tense")
- Past Finite ("Imperfect Tense")
- Imperative Mood
- Subjunctive Mood
- Infinitive
- Participle
- Simple
- Future Finite ("Future Tense")
- Future Participle for Purpose with Verbs of Motion
- Past Finite ("Aorist Tense")
- Imperative Mood
- Subjunctive Mood
- Infinitive
- Participle
- Continuous
- Syntax
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- Comparison
- Location
- Purpose
- Conditionals (general/future more vivid)
- Vocabulary
- Learn basic ancient Greek vocabulary, based on the top 50% vocabulary (the most common words that make up 50% of the existing ancient Greek corpus) and supplemented with less common vocabulary useful for discussing geometry, the human body and medicine, failure in romance, and the daily life of a modern student in the Pacific Northwest.
Active Language Use
Ancient Greek is a language, like French or Spanish. The fact that ancient Greek is an older language does not make it a code or logic puzzle instead of a language: it is still a language, and you should approach learning it as you would any other language. You wouldn't try to learn Spanish by reading some grammar instructions, memorizing a list of vocabulary, and taking a quiz—you learn Spanish by using the language to get increasingly more complex points across to another human being. The same applies to Greek: the more you use the language to express your thoughts, both in speech and writing, the better you will get at it.
Class Meetings
Greek 102 meets every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday in the winter quarter, from Wednesday, January 8, until Friday, March 14, from 8:30 AM to 9:50 PM in Miller Hall 022 (basement).
Instructor
- Office
- Miller Hall 122D
- Office Hours
-
- Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays
- 12:00–1:00 PM
- Tuesdays and Thursdays
- 2:00–2:30 PM
- miller.krause@wwu.edu
- Office Phone
- (360) 650-4269 (email is better)
Required and Recommended Course Materials
There is no textbook to purchase for the class; you will be provided with chapters, both on paper and in PDF form, from a textbook being developed for active Attic Greek.
I have recommended some dictionaries and a reference grammar on the Resources page.
Academic Honesty
Western has a policy on academic honesty and a statement on integrity. Unusually, and quite Platonically, Western does not focus on the negative consequences of cheating or plagiarism, but on the positive results of honesty and integrity. There are many forms that dishonest academic behavior might take, from plagiarism to having another write your papers for you to cheating on a test: honesty, though, has but one form, namely putting in the required work, and one consequence, namely learning.
Course Requirements and Grading
Grading Scale
Course Requirements
συνουσία καὶ μετάληψις (Attendance and Participation; 20%)
Classes will give you time to interact with other students in Greek, and this will be the primary way that you learn ancient Greek. You need the practice in interpersonal communication, including listening and speaking, that class provides, so you need to come to class. I understand that sometimes problems do arise, so Canvas will automatically excuse three absences.
If you plan to miss class to undertake military service, observe religious holidays, or travel for sports or other University-sponsored activities, let me know in writing during the first two weeks of class, so that I can excuse your absences and work with you to change due dates for your assignments.
μελετήματα καθ' ἡμέραν (Daily Assignments; 30%)
There will be short, daily assignments to turn in, some written and some spoken, to give you individual practice.
Turn in written assignments (📄) on paper in class. You wrote assignments by hand the first quarter; you might want to try typing them now, but feel free to continue writing by hand. These assignments will give you a chance to practice reading and short-form writing on your own. It is much faster and easier for me to review, comment on, and grade Greek assignments on paper than on Canvas.
Record and submit spoken assignments (🎙️) using Canvas. There will be fewer of these, but they give me a good opportunity to check on individual students' pronunciation. Illustrated instructions and a video are available at https://community.canvaslms.com/t5/Student-Guide/How-do-I-record-media-using-the-Rich-Content-Editor-as-a-student/ta-p/379 .
συγγράμματα ἑβδομαδικά (Weekly Compositions; 20%)
Each weekend, you will have a writing prompt for compositions (📓), relating to the subject matter we covered that week. Write your συγγράμματα in the ἐγχειρίδιον that you received your first year. Work on writing longer, more complex material, and feel free to use lsj.gr or other resources to aid you. You should be able to judge your own progression in using the language by looking back at what you have done.
You are not obligated to tell the truth in your συγγράμματα—I don't really care what you like to do after class or what you did during the summer, and you don't have to tell me your secrets. In fact, lying may be better, because it lets you adapt your response to your own proficiency and comfort zone.
ἐξετάσεις (Tests; 20%)
Each unit will have at an ἐξέτασις (‼️, quiz/test/assessment). It is possible to finish these by oneself, but they are meant to be collaborative tasks: you may talk to each other during the tests and about the tests, so long as you speak only in ancient Greek.
ἡ ἐσχάτη ἐξέτασις (Final Examination; 10%)
There will be a final examination (‼️), to be taken in class on paper. The final exam will be collaborative like the regular tests: you may talk to each other during the exam and about the exam, so long as you speak only in ancient Greek. The final examination will be administered according to the Registrar's schedule for final examinations:
- March 20, 2023, 10:30 AM–12:30 PM
Course Summary:
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