LATIN 102 B: Introductory Latin

Winter 2026
Meeting:
MTWThF 10:30am - 11:20am
SLN:
16299
Section Type:
Lecture
Instructor:
Syllabus Description (from Canvas):

Latin 102 鈥 Winter 2026 鈥 Introductory Latin

Monday-Friday, 10:30-11:20am, Smith 107

 

Instructor: Liam Dulany (he/him)      Email Address: wdulany@uw.edu

Course Coordinator: Professor Catherine Connors (cconnors@uw.edu)         

Department Phone: 206-543-2266     Department Website:

Office Hours: Thursday, 11:30-12:30pm, Denny 400K          

                        (or by appointment)

 

Required Texts:

Wheelock鈥檚 Latin (7th ed.) 鈥 our primary textbook, and the source for both our lessons and practice exercises

Thirty-Eight Latin Stories (6th ed.) 鈥 short Latin stories for additional translation practice

 

Reference Texts:

Any reputable Latin dictionary. offers free access to several public domain Latin dictionaries.

N.B. you search logeion by lemma, the nominative singular form of a noun or first principal part of a verb.

 

NEW: On certain days with more homework than usual, prioritize the bolded exercises first, as they will be the ones we cover in class; non-bolded exercises should be done for additional practice as necessary. 

Week 1:

M         January 5: Introduction and Syllabus Overview

T          January 6: Review Homework: 鈥淐yrus Dying Words鈥 and 鈥淔abian Tactics鈥 (Wh. p. 128)

W         January 7: Read Wheelock Ch. 16

Th        January 8: Ch. 16 Exerc. 4, 9, 15; Sent. Antiq. 5, 7, 12; 鈥淛uvenal Explains鈥︹ (p. 136)

F          January 9: 38 L.S., 鈥淭he Wrath of Achilles鈥 (pp. 28-29)  

 

Week 2:

M         January 12: Read Wheelock Ch. 17

T          January 13: Ch. 17 Exerc. 4, 8, 10, 11, 12; Sent. 2, 5, 8, 11

W         January 14: 38 L.S., 鈥淭he Myrmidons鈥 (pp. 30-31); Composition Exercise 1

Th        January 15: Ch. 17 Exerc. 5, 13; Sent. 3, 6, 10; 鈥淥n the Pleasures of Love鈥︹ (p. 143)

F          January 16: Read Wheelock Ch. 18

 

Week 3:

M         January 19: NO CLASS (MLK Jr. Day)

T          January 20: Ch. 18 Exerc. 2, 3, 4, 10, 11, 14; Sent. 4, 8, 11; 鈥淥n Death鈥︹ (p. 151)

W         January 21: 38 L.S., 鈥淎 Wedding Invitation鈥 (pp. 32-33); Composition Exercise 2

Th        January 22: Review Day

F          January 23: Assessment #1

 

Week 4:

M         January 26: Read Wheelock Ch. 19

T          January 27: Ch. 19 Exerc. 2, 7, 8, 13; Sententiae 5, 7; "Catullus Bids..." (p. 159)

W         January 28: 38 L.S., 鈥淭he Judgment of Paris鈥 (pp. 34-35); Composition Exercise 3

Th        January 29: Ch. 19 Exerc. 6, 10, 14; Sententiae 4, 6; "The Aged Playwright..." (p. 158)

F          January 30: Sightreading Practice #1

 

Week 5:

M         February 2: Read Wheelock Ch. 20

T          February 3: Exerc. 2, 5, 6, 8, 11, 13; Sentent. 2, 3, 8, 11; "Cicero Urges..." (p. 166)

W         February 4: 38 L.S., 鈥淭he Labors of Hercules鈥; Composition Exercise 4

Th        February 5: Review Day

F          February 6: Assessment #2

 

Week 6:

M         February 9: Read Wheelock Ch. 21

T          February 10: Exerc. 2, 4, 5, 12, 14; Sentent. 1, 2, 4, 5, 9; "Vergil's Messianic Eclogue" (p. 173) 

W         February 11: 38 L.S., 鈥淭he Golden Age Returns鈥; Composition Exercise 5

Th        February 12: Read Wheelock Ch. 22

F          February 13: Latin Love Elegy Sightreading

 

Week 7:

M         February 16: NO CLASS (Presidents鈥 Day)

T          February 17: Exerc. 5, 7, 9, 10, 143, 6, 12, 14; "On Ambition and Literature..." (p. 182) 

W         February 18: 38 L.S., 鈥淐icero Reports His Victory Over Catiline鈥

Th        February 19: Review Day

F          February 20: Assessment #3

 

Week 8:

M         February 23: Read Wheelock Ch. 23

T          February 24: Exerc. 2, 5, 7, 10, 12; Sentent. 2, 3, 14

W         February 25: 38 L.S., 鈥淲atching the Orator at Work鈥

Th        February 26: Exerc. 1, 6; Sentent. 6, 13; "Laocoon Speaks Out..." (p. 189)

F          February 27: Sightreading Practice #3

 

Week 9:

M         March 2: Read Wheelock Ch. 24

T          March 3: Exerc. 2, 3, 8, 15; Sentent. 1, 3, 6, 7, 8; "The Satirist's Modus Operandi" (p. 199)  

W         March 4: 38 L.S., 鈥淐aesar鈥檚 Camp is Attacked by Belgians鈥

Th        March 5: Review Day

F          March 6: Assessment #4

 

Week 10:

M         March 9: Read Wheelock Ch. 25

T          March 10: Exerc. 1, 4, 10, 11, 15; Sentent. 2, 8, 9, 10; "The Death of Laocoon..." (p. 207)

W         March 11: 38 L.S., 鈥淭he Character of Catiline鈥檚 Followers鈥

Th        March 12: Sightreading Practice #4

F          March 13: Final Review Day

 

            Finals Week:

Su        March 15: 2,070th anniversary of Julius Caesar鈥檚 assassination (No class, just a fun fact)

M         March 16: Final Exam, 8:30-10:20am in Smith 107

 

 

Course Goals:

The first-year Latin sequence (101-102-103) will prepare you to read any Latin author at an intermediate level with access to a dictionary and commentary, such that you can go right into one of our second-year Latin courses (304, 305, 306, 307).

Pursuant to this goal, you will learn to:

  1. Read and translate short selections from ancient 海角网 authors, as well as compose simple sentences in Latin
  2. Understand and explain the literary, historical, and cultural context of texts by ancient 海角网 authors
  3. Analyze and explain Latin grammar and syntax
  4. Analyze and describe the influence of the Latin language on subsequent languages and literatures.

The 海角网 Department Undergraduate Program Coordinator (who is also our faculty supervisor), Professor Catherine Connors, is happy to speak with students at any time about majors, minors, or coursework in the department!

 

Class Conduct and Expectations:

Please come to class! Regular attendance is the most important thing you can do to help you acquire the Latin language. Computers and tablets are allowed, but please stay on task. University conduct and scholarly integrity codes must be followed at all times.

If you miss class, please email me letting me know. I prefer if you can do so before the class that you miss, but after is okay too, as long as it is prompt (within 24 hours). You are responsible for any work or reading you miss while absent, and I am always available during office hours to help you go over any missed content. You can access handouts and other materials used during class under the relevant week鈥檚 module on canvas.

You are encouraged to call me by my first name, Liam. If you鈥檙e more comfortable using a title, go for either Mr. or 鈥淚nstructor,鈥 I鈥檓 not a professor yet. As this is a Latin class, you can call me magister if you wish, but that鈥檚 entirely based on personal preference! I can only guarantee answering class emails on weekdays (M-F), during work hours (9:00-17:00), and will try to get back to you within one business day of you sending your email 鈥 after 24 hours (not including weekend hours), feel free to send a follow-up. To ensure that your email goes to the top of my priority list, please include [LATIN] in your subject line!

When emailing me, remember that any correspondence via public university email is a matter of public record, according to RCW 42.56, the Washington State Public Records Act. This means that anything you send can be shown to any citizen who requests it. In addition, I have the right (and obligation) to share anything I think necessary with my supervisor or state authorities.

Due to university policy, I am not allowed to discuss grades directly via email. If you need to discuss your grades, please get in touch to schedule a zoom meeting or drop by office hours.

 

Academic Integrity:

The use of 鈥淎I,鈥 chatbots, LLMs, or any other sort of text generative technology is not allowed in this course.

University of Washington students are expected to practice high standards of academic and professional honesty and integrity as outlined here:

 

Learning Support/Access and Accommodations:

Your experience in this class is important to me. If you have already established accommodations with Disability Resources for Students (DRS), please communicate your approved accommodations to me at your earliest convenience so we can discuss your needs in this course.

If you have not yet established services through DRS, but have a temporary health condition or permanent disability that requires accommodations (conditions include but not limited to; mental health, attention-related, learning, vision, hearing, physical or health impacts), you are welcome to contact DRS at 206-543-8924 or uwdrs@uw.edu or disability.uw.edu. DRS offers resources and coordinates reasonable accommodations for students with disabilities and/or temporary health conditions. Reasonable accommodations are established through an interactive process between you, your instructor(s) and DRS. It is the policy and practice of the UW to create inclusive and accessible learning environments consistent with federal and state law.

UW Seattle: Email: uwdrs@uw.edu
Phone: 206-543-8924

 

Religious Accommodations:

            Washington state law requires that UW develop a policy for accommodation of student absences
            or significant hardship due to reasons of faith or conscience, or for organized religious activities.
            The UW鈥檚 policy, including more information about how to request an accommodation, is
            available at . Accommodations must be requested within the
            first two weeks of this course using the .

Grading Breakdown:

Homework/Participation: 25%

Participating in class activities is worth 25% of your grade. As it is impossible to participate in class activities without attending, I will be taking attendance daily. If you miss a class, you are encouraged to meet with me in office hours to go over what you have missed and submit corrected homework for credit.

N.B. 鈥 regular participation is just as important to your grade as the final!

Four Assessments: 50%

Assessments will be conducted in class, on paper, without access to outside resources. You will have the full 50-minute class period to complete the assessments. Assessments in a language class are necessarily somewhat cumulative, but will focus on the new material since the last assessment.

Final: 25%

The final exam is cumulative across the course, and will be taken on Monday, March 16th from 8:30-10:20am (I am deeply sorry that it is so early)

 

Grading Scale:

%Earned          Grade-Point     % Earned         Grade-Point     % Earned         Grade-Point

100-95             4.0                   81                    2.8                   69                    1.6                  

94                    3.9                   80                    2.7                   68                    1.5

93                    3.8                   79                    2.6                   67                    1.4

92                    3.7                   78                    2.5                   66                    1.3

91                    3.6                   77                    2.4                  65                    1.2

90-89               3.5                   76                    2.3                  64                    1.1

88-87               3.4                   75                    2.2                   63                    1.0

86                    3.3                   74                    2.1                   62                    0.9

85                    3.2                   73                    2.0                   61                    0.8

84                    3.1                   72                    1.9                   60                    0.7

83                    3.0                   71                    1.8                   59 and x < 59   0.0

82                    2.9                   70                    1.7

 

Further Resources:

            : Provides UW students, staff, and faculty with nonperishable groceries and select fresh produce for no cost.

            : Resources for students seeking counseling.

            : Free, confidential, informal drop-in counseling service at UW.

            : Resources for undocumented students.

            : Visa and immigration advising for international students on            F or J student visas.

            : How to report violence or threats to the safety of yourself or others.

I reserve the right to change the schedule at any time. Please remain flexible throughout the quarter as to precisely which lessons we will be going over on specific days.

Catalog Description:
An intensive study of grammar, with reading and writing of simple Latin prose. Second in a sequence of three. Prerequisite: LATIN 101. Offered: W.
GE Requirements Met:
Arts and Humanities (A&H)
Credits:
5.0
Status:
Active
Last updated:
April 17, 2026 - 1:23 am