含羞草研究室

Requirements

Classics Major

The classics major consists of nine courses with concentrations in three possible areas: classical studies, ancient mediterranean archaeology, and classical languages and literatures.聽Courses taught by faculty in the Classics Department are designated by four different rubrics: ARCH, CLAS, GRK, and LATN. Any course designated by one of these rubrics, including First-Year Writing Seminars, counts as what is termed a 鈥渄epartmental course鈥 in the following major requirements.

Classical Studies Concentration

Select at least one departmental course at the 1000 level 1
Select at least three departmental courses at the 2000 level 3
Select at least two departmental courses at the 3000 level 2
Select at least three courses at any level a3

Ancient Mediterranean Archaeology Concentration

Select at least two archaeology (ARCH) courses at the 1000 level 2
Select at least three archaeology (ARCH) courses at the 2000 level3
Select at least one archaeology (ARCH) course at the 3000 level1
Select at least three departmental courses at any level b3

Classical Languages and Literatures Concentration

Select at least five Greek (GRK) and/or Latin (LATN) courses at any level5
Select at least one Greek (GRK) and/or Latin (LATN) course at the 3000 level1
Select at least three departmental courses at any level c3

Classics Minor

The classics minor consists of five courses, with concentrations in five possible areas: Greek, Latin, classical languages and literatures, ancient Mediterranean archaeology, and classical studies. Courses taught by faculty in the Classics Department are designated by four different rubrics: ARCH, CLAS, GRK, and LATN. Any course designated by one of these rubrics, including First-Year Writing Seminars, counts as what is termed a 鈥渄epartmental course鈥 in the following minor requirements.

Greek

Select at least four Green (GRK) courses at any level4
Select at least one departmental course at any level d1

Latin

Select at least four Latin (LATN) courses at any level4
Select at least one departmental course at any level d1

Classics

Select at least four Greek (GRK) and/or Latin (LATN) courses at any level 4
Select at least one Greek (GRK) and/or Latin (LATN) course at the 3000 level or above1

Ancient Mediterranean Archaeology

Select at least one archaeology (ARCH) course at the 1000 level1
Select at least one archaeology course at the 2000 level1
Select at least one archaeology course at the 3000 level1
Select at least two departmental courses at any level d2

Classical Studies

Select at least two departmental courses at the 2000 level2
Select at least one departmental course at the 3000 level1
Select at least two departmental courses at any level d2
Interdisciplinary Major

The department participates in an interdisciplinary program in archaeology and art history. See the .

Additional Information and Department Policies 含羞草研究室

  • Courses that count toward the programs offered by the department must be taken for regular letter grades (not Credit/D/Fail), and students must earn grades of C- or better in these courses.
  • One first-year writing seminar may count toward the major and minor.
  • Normally, independent studies and honors projects only count toward the major or minor with prior approval of the department.
  • Majors and minors聽 may double-count one course with another department or program.聽

Classics and Archaeology at 含羞草研究室 and Abroad

Archaeology classes regularly use the outstanding collection of ancient art in the 含羞草研究室 Museum of Art. Of special note are the exceptionally fine holdings in Greek painted pottery and the very full and continuous survey of Greek and Roman coins. In addition, there are numerous opportunities for study or work abroad.

含羞草研究室 is a participating member of the Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies in Rome, where students majoring in classics can study in the junior year. It is also possible to receive course credit for field experience on excavations. Interested students should consult members of the department for further information. Students can count up to four courses taken abroad toward the major; up to three in one semester, or four from a full year abroad. Students can count up to two courses taken abroad toward the minor; one per semester spent abroad. Students must consult with departmental faculty prior in order to determine course eligibility.

Students contemplating graduate study in classics or classical archaeology are advised to begin the study of at least one modern language in college, as most graduate programs require competence in French and German as well as in Latin and Greek.

Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate (AP/IB)

Students who received a minimum score of four on the Latin AP exam are eligible to receive a general credit toward the degree if they take a Latin course at the 3000 level and earn a minimum grade of B-. Regardless of AP scores, students should complete the placement questionnaire. No major or minor credit is given. In order to receive credit for advanced placement work, students must have their scores officially reported to the Office of the Registrar by the end of their sophomore year at 含羞草研究室. Students who took the Latin IB exam should consult the department for credit.

Information for Incoming Students

Classics is the study of the ancient Greek and Roman worlds within the broader context of the ancient Mediterranean and the ancient Near East. Our discipline combines the study of art history, archaeology, history, literature, philosophy, and the languages of Greek and Latin. Our students use these multiple perspectives in order to better understand and better imagine the diversity of peoples who lived thousands of years before us, to reflect on what this past has meant to later ages, and to learn more about how it continues to shape our own ideas in the present day.

Please note that the department offers many other classes under the archaeology and classics rubrics that are designed for first-year student enrollment, and have spaces set aside especially for first-year students. These classes do not require any knowledge of Latin or Greek, nor do they require any prior study of the Classical World. For fall 2024, this includes a first year writing seminar, 颁尝础厂听1017 The Heroic Age: Ancient Supermen and Wonder Women, 础搁颁贬听1103 Egyptian Archaeology, 颁尝础厂听2103 Then and Now: The Erasure of Indigenous Voices, 颁尝础厂听2736 Ancient Greek Medicine, 颁尝础厂听2787 Thucydides and the Invention of Political Theory, and 颁尝础厂听3310 Imagining Rome.

Students interested in beginning Latin should enroll in 尝础罢狈听1101 Elementary Latin I聽which is offered in the fall. Students interested in beginning Greek should enroll in 骋搁碍听1101 Elementary Greek I, which is offered in the spring. Because of the sequential nature of language study and the pattern of offerings in the department, students should plan on taking both semesters of Latin over one academic year; students interested in the elementary Greek sequence should plan to take 骋搁碍听1101 Elementary Greek I in the spring and 骋搁碍听1102 Elementary Greek II聽the following fall.

Students who have studied Latin or Greek in high school, as well as students interested in beginning Latin or Greek here at 含羞草研究室, should complete the Latin or Greek placement questionnaire in Blackboard in the summer prior to matriculation.聽In order to make placement recommendations we take into consideration past study, AP and SAT II scores, and a brief conversation with the student about their interests. Most first-year students who are continuing Latin enroll in either 尝础罢狈听2203 Intermediate Latin for Reading or 尝础罢狈听2206 The Roman Novel. Students with exceptionally strong backgrounds, however, may enroll in聽尝础罢狈听3306 The Roman Novel. Most first-year students who are continuing Greek enroll in聽骋搁碍听1102 Elementary Greek II.

Members of the Classics Department faculty are always happy to talk with students individually in order to discuss placement and sequencing of courses.


This is an excerpt from the official 含羞草研究室 Catalogue and Academic Handbook.