I think it would be harsh if people who've already started Latin GCSE had to stop it, but otherwise, I think this is a fairly unimpressive set of arguments from the pro-Latin people.
https://www.theguardian.com/education/2 ... ing-pulled
“It is very difficult to get a handle on vast swathes of the humanities if you don’t have some knowledge of Latin. A lot of English literature is saturated with knowledge of Latin. It’s really important to understand the history of art, and the language of the church is written in Latin,” Holland said.
Latin certainly helps with English and Romance languages, but I assume that if you know a Romance language it makes it much easier to learn another.
Why is the "language of the church" a priority? I have a Classics degree and I never once read any church Latin. And as I've said, people can take Classics degrees these days without studying Latin at school at all. Most of this is a better argument for Classical Civilization than for Latin- not least because Classical Civilization takes in Greece too.
William Bearcroft, the head of Latin and classics at the Phoenix academy, a state secondary in west London with a high proportion of students from deprived backgrounds, said there was an “unapologetic social justice element” to teaching Latin through the programme.
“Latin is perceived as being prestigious and difficult. I don’t think it is difficult, and I don’t love the prestigious element either, but I think there is something powerful about students from our context getting a [grade] 7 or 9 in Latin, a subject that you could otherwise only expect from a student who probably attended a private school. I think that is really important and empowering,” Bearcroft said.
“We give them the chance to excel in a challenging qualification, and my hope is that they will stand out when they are applying for university.”
Roughly translated- this can't be scrapped because otherwise our kids won't have an advantage over your kids when they apply to university. He seems pretty keen on the prestige aspect. And I'm not quite sure why anyone would think working class kids couldn't do Latin. I don't know what his academy is like, but there are a lot of very overpaid people in academies generally who could fund Latin classes, I reckon.
What we're talking about is a very small number of kids getting special funding to do Latin. I don't really get why that should be a priority in the current climate. I actually give Bridget Philipson some credit for seeing that, even though she must know she's going to get shit for it, just like Becky Francis will get shit for trying to get a curriculum in that doesn't put off a load of what the right in other cirucumstances refer to as "white working class boys".