Second Contact Session
May 02-06, sofia, Bulgaria
After the successful First
Contact Session of the “Contextualizing Classics” OSI-HESP Regional Seminar
which took place last September, the University
of Sofia
once again hosted a Second Contact Session this spring (2-6 May 2006). The
meeting was on a smaller regional scale than the previous one and included Seminar
Participants from Macedonia,
Serbia,
Croatia,
Romania
and Bulgaria.
On the other hand, it enhanced significantly the cooperation on several of the
Seminar’s Intersession Activities through a series of coordination meetings.
One of the other major goals
during the five days of the Session was the opening of the Seminar towards
academic institutions in Bulgaria other than the University
of Sofia.
The Contact Session included representatives of the Universities of Veliko
Turnovo, Blagoevgrad, and the
Medical Academy of Sofia. Scholars from all around Bulgaria
got acquainted with the philosophy, the strategy and the aims of the
“Contextualizing Classics” Regional Seminar and were given the opportunity to
actively promote them in their home institutions. The organizers hope that this
practice will serve as a model for the promotion of the Seminar in other
countries from which Seminar Participants come.
The third main emphasis of the
event was getting students involved in the activities of the Regional Seminar.
Two of the guest-speakers conducted open lessons with the students from the
Department of Classics at Sofia University.
This exchange of teaching methods and practices between representatives of
different countries helped Bulgarian students open their minds towards the
multiplicity of different possible learning experiences and, at the same time,
gave useful hints and insights to the teachers in Classics which methods and
forms of education can be successfully transferred in a foreign context.
The activities in which the participants engaged
were the following:
Open lessons
Vesna Dimovska
Adjective Degrees in Latin
Octavian Gordon
From Manuscript to Critical Edition
Lectures and Presentations
Dragana Dimitrijevich
Could Cicero's Conception of 'Humanitas' Be Applied to the Current Reforms
of University Courses in Humanities?
Vesna Dimovska
Humanistic Education in Macedonia
Elena Dzukeska
The Position of Historical Grammar in the Previous and in the Current BA
Curriculum of the Institute of Classical Studies in Skopje
Violeta Gerjikova
Why Classics, or How Do Classics Departments Advertise What
They Sell on the Internet
Octavian Gordon
The Classic Curricula in Romanian Faculties of Theology
Dimitar Iliev
Teaching Greek Poetry with TLG
Elia Marinova
Textual Criticism as a University Discipline: Limits and Perspectives
Nevena Panova
Plato's Attitude to Poetry and Poets and the Possible Interpretative
Approaches towards It
Nicolay Sharankov
Ancient Heritage and Classical Education in Bulgaria
Gorana Stepanich
In epigrammata priscorum commentarius: a Humanist Way of Contextualising
Classics
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