Monmouth College among elite group preparing
Latin teachersRelease Date:
September 10, 2007
MONMOUTH, Ill. —
Monmouth College is among only 14 schools in the United States cited in
U.S. News and World Report’s 2008 "America’s Best Colleges" issue for
offering Latin teacher education.
One of the few academic departments dating to the college’s founding
in 1853, Monmouth’s classics department has continued to thrive in
recent years, despite a downward national trend in the offering of Latin
and Greek at the college level.
Thomas Sienkewicz, MC’s Capron Professor of Classics, is one of a
handful of academics working to address a nationwide shortage of Latin
teachers at the K-12 level. In 2003, he helped organize the first annual
National Latin Teacher Recruitment Week to raise awareness of the
problem.
"There is a nationwide shortage of Latin teachers at the K-12 level,"
said Sienkewicz. "Every year, a Latin program dies because a school
cannot find a qualified teacher. Also, thriving programs are told they
cannot expand, and schools that want to add Latin are unable to do so."
Most of the 14 colleges listed by U.S. News are significantly larger
than Monmouth. They include the University of Illinois, Brigham Young
University and Western Michigan University.
"In recent years, Monmouth has been producing at least as many Latin
teacher candidates as the University of Illinois," Sienkewicz noted.
Lisa Wolfe, a 1994 Monmouth graduate who teaches approximately 60
Galesburg students in Latin I through IV, said she got her position
because of the national teacher shortage.
"They’re few and far between," she said. "The previous Latin teacher
retired, and I sort of got drafted."
According to literature published in conjunction with National Latin
Teacher Recruitment Week, "beginning salaries (are) often in the
$30-40,000 range for just a nine- or ten-month contract. And Latin
teachers have more fun than most: their students tend to be motivated
and academically capable above the average, and the subject they teach
is richly interdisciplinary, including not only the language and
literature of the ancient Romans, but also their history and politics,
philosophy and religion, myths and legends (and) art and architecture."
Wolfe certainly agrees. "I tell people that I have the easiest job in
the world," she said. "Latin students are highly motivated and are
usually bright. They’re taking Latin because they want to."
Released
by the Office of College Communications
Barry McNamara, Associate Director of College Communications
Phone: 309-457-2117
Fax: 309-457-2330
|