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THE ROMANS left behind a rich body of cultural artifacts, literature, and learning that has shaped Western and World History and continues to our own modern world. Our own culture, including our system of government, architecture, art and religion, shows the heavy influence of Rome.
STUDENTS OF LATIN see immediate benefits to their spoken and written English. More than 65% of English words come from Latin (and more than 90% of those over two syllables).
LATIN STUDENTS gain an expanded vocabulary and an understanding of word formation that can help even with unfamiliar words. These skills are particularly useful for students planning to enter fields with large technical vocabularies. Those of medicine and law, for example, are primarily based on Latin. Not surprisingly, knowing Latin tends to boost SAT scores.
LEARNING an inflected language (where endings change to show different grammar usage) with a very different sentence structure than English is an excellent introduction to how languages work in general, and students learn more about English as they learn how differently it works from Latin. Students who study Romance languages (Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian) also have an edge after studying Latin, since Latin is the source of 75-80% of all words in these languages.
THE STUDY OF LATIN also provides training in logical thinking, boosting cognitive processes essential for math, science, and engineering. Latin has been said to cultivate such mental processes as alertness, attention to detail, memory, logic, and critical reasoning.
The Latin Advantage (including SAT numbers of Latin students)
Latin in the Schools Today