Abstract
Abstract
The idea for this special issue of Journal of Classics Teaching arose from the conference ‘Monsters in the classroom: Latin and Greek at primary school’ which Steve Hunt (Cambridge), Lidewij Van Gils (Amsterdam), and myself (Ghent) co-organised in January of 2022.1 This conference gathered teaching expertise from eight countries and attracted more than 120 participants from 20 countries to discuss both the successes and challenges related to current international practice in the teaching of Classical languages at primary school. It became a constructive and fruitful event, where participants from different countries shared good practice in order to learn from each other and formulate steps forward.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference25 articles.
1. Naar een volwaardig talenbeleid. Omgaan met meertaligheid in het Vlaams onderwijs;Van den Branden;TORB,2008
2. Jordens, K (2016) “Turkish is not for Learning, Miss”. Valorizing Linguistic Diversity in Primary Education (PhD thesis). Leuven: KU Leuven.
3. Language and Intergroup Contact: Investigating the Impact of Bilingual Instruction on Children’s Intergroup Attitudes
4. Troubling translanguaging: language ideologies, superdiversity and interethnic conflict