“Hardly any lawful price would seem to me too high for what I have gained by being made to learn Latin and Greek.” -C.S. Lewis
One of the distinctives of a classical education is – typically – an emphasis on learning at least one of the classical languages: Latin or Greek. While there are arguments in favor of each, Latin is uniquely connected with our cultural heritage as Americans, Christians, and English speakers, and all Stonehaven students learn Latin from at least 3rd-8th grade, with the option to continue throughout high school. Why spend so much time learning a “dead” language?
“To read Latin and Greek in their original, is a sublime luxury. I thank on my knees him who directed my early education for having put into my possession this rich source of delight; and I would not exchange it for anything which I could then have acquired, and have not since acquired.” -Thomas Jefferson
To begin with, there are many reasons to study Latin, and they will resonate differently with different people. Likewise there are benefits that will accrue to the Latin student who goes only through 8th grade and others that will accrue to the student who advances to reading the authentic texts (beginning around 11th grade).