A book club for Classics teachers to deepen subject & pedagogical knowledge. Run by @MsSSaunders and @MrClassics3. Inspired by @historybookgrp.
DM for Discord.
The results are in! The next @ClassicsBook read will be The Trojan Women and Other Plays - Euripides (Oxford World's Classics Edition)
Available on Amazon.
OR if you prefer, through Oxford University Press:
https://t.co/D8HA6ne1TV
The Trojan Women and other Plays - Euripides (Oxford World's Classics)
Women at War in the Classical World - Paul Chrystal
Invisible Romans - Robert Knapp
The Odyssey - (trans) Emily Wilson
Next @ClassicsBook read has a Classics pedagogy focus.
Whether it be using MFL pedagogy to aid our teaching of Latin, History pedagogy to aid Ancient History or Classical Civilisation, or English to help with Classical Civ elements.
Get your thinking cap on!
That's it for our discussion tonight!
Thank you so much for joining in and special thanks to those who submitted questions - some lovely ones in there tonight (please do fess up for credit!)
@ClassicsBook Going back to the provenance of myths is something I’ll try to do more of e.g. I didn’t realise that the Gorgons started off as just heads! I’d just assumed that depictions of the disembodied Medusa was a result of events in the story.
@ClassicsBook Your classics action-hero fascination I think. We still do it now, just look at movies like Die Hard (not jibing, it's an excellent set of films!).
@ClassicsBook Definitely. Planning an enrichment unit focusing on women of mythology. Pandora is a brilliant example. I ‘knew’ the traditional story but I loved discovering the complexity of that myth. That’s the journey I want to take my students on.