General
Ask them if you can come by their office hours.Ìý These should be listed on the course syllabus; otherwise you can e-mail and ask.Ìý Individual professors have different practices: some simply commit to be in their offices and will meet with students on a first-come, first-served basis; others will schedule appointments during their office hours. Sometimes professors will combine both systems: schedule meetings when they are helping students get started on a paper and an open first-come, first-serve system the rest of the time.Ìý During their office hours, professors will usually leave their doors open; if they aren’t, just knock.
First, see the instructor during their normal office hours to see if s/he can help. If you think you need a tutor, please contact Classics@colorado.edu, for a list of graduate students whom you can hire.
If you are a major or graduate student, you will probably receive e-mail announcements of visiting lectures and other events.Ìý You can also find events listed on the website by clicking the events tab—logically enough.
You can download the Classics Newsletter as a PDF.Ìý See our Newsletter Signup Page for info on how to signup for a digitalÌýcopy as soon as it is released.
Find out more at Classics Club or contact the currentÌýfaculty point-person, Zach Herz.
The University of Colorado makes its courses available to non-degree-seeking students through a program calledÌý; registration begins on the first day of class, though you are encouraged to inquire ahead of time whether the instructor expects there to be space available in the class.Ìý In addition, the Classics Department sometimes offers Greek and Latin in the summer through theÌýÌýor theÌý.Ìý Contact the Associate Chair for Graduate Studies for details.
³§±ð±ðÌýÌý´Ç°ùÌýÌýfor resources available at Norlin Library as well as online resources to which CU Libraries subscribe.Ìý The Classics Department also has a small, non-circulating collection of basic texts and reference works housed in the Eaton Humanities Building.
Faculty mailboxes are located in the departmental office on the 3rdÌýfloor of the Humanities building.
Undergraduate
See the Honors page
The CU-Classics Club is dedicated to promoting community between fellow Classics majors through game nights, informational sessions, and an annual "Classics themed" dinner and movie night in Â鶹ӰԺ.
What can I do with a major or minor in Classics, Greek, or Latin?
Many of our majors and minors go on to graduate school in Classics, Archaeology, English, History, Comparative Literature, Philosophy, Information Science, or Museum Studies. Alumni who began their careers as Classics majors have also gone on to become doctors, lawyers, teachers and administrators, members of the diplomatic service, engineers, leaders in business and industry, and entrepreneurs of all types. Undergraduates interested in law or medicine will be especially pleased to discover that law schools and medical schools have a long history of accepting Classics students. You will leave Â鶹ӰԺ with a good education because you have learned not only to pay attention to detail and to memorize facts but also to analyze and interpret; because, through your study of Latin and Greek, your knowledge of language and its use will be vastly improved; and because you have pondered the irrational, noble, corrupt, idealistic, mundane, and creative qualities that characterize the contributions of ancient Greece and Rome to world culture.
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Graduate
The graduate director, officially the associate chair for graduate studies, is the advisor for all graduate students. They will meet with each of you each semester to help you decide on courses for the next semester and answer other questions. It is often also helpful to consult with and get to know a professor with whom you feel a bond or who works in your field.Ìý In the final stages of your doctorate, you’ll have an official advisor, the professor directing your dissertation. S/he will probably both work with you on your thesis and provide career advice and support.
The current graduate advisor is Sarah James.Ìý She can be reached atÌýSarah.A.James@colorado.edu, 303-492-0252.
The Graduate Program Assistant will be your main contact.Ìý They areÌýlocatedÌýin office HUMN 340.
If you are a funded student and have questions about your funding or your employment with CU, please contact Sandy Brown, Manager of Finance & Business Operations, at sandra.brown@colorado.edu, 303-492-2632, or HUMN 382.
The basic requirement is demonstrated proficiency in reading Greek or Latin.Ìý Not all M.A. degree tracks require the same amount of further language study, and the classroom experience of recently admitted students covers quite a range from two or three college years of one language to four or more of both.Ìý Reading proficiency in modern foreign languages (especially German and French or Italian) is strongly encouraged and is acquired by our students either before they arrive or during their graduate studies.
No.Ìý GRE scores are optional and most applicants do not submit them.
Applicants to the graduate program in Classics may be nominated for campus- or college-wide fellowships such as the Chancellor’s Fellowship, Devaney Fellowship, or Center for Humanities and the Arts Fellowship.Ìý In addition, we employ both M.A. and Ph.D. students as Teaching Assistants in undergraduate classes and as Research Assistants.Ìý These appointments, which typically come with a stipend, a tuition waiver, and a contribution towards fees and costs such as health insurance, are awarded on a competitive basis.Ìý TAs assist in large lecture classes, lead discussion sections attached to large lecture classes, or teach sections of Beginning or Intermediate Latin or Beginning Greek.Ìý RAs are paired with a faculty member to do research in an area of shared interest.ÌýÌý Finally, the department distributes a modest amount of cash support funded by the University Fellowship Program.
Tuition and fees are just one part of the overall cost to attend CU Â鶹ӰԺ. The full cost of attendance for an academic year could include expenses such as on-campus housing and food, books and supplies, and items that are not billed by the university, such as personal expenses, transportation and medical insurance. View theÌýfull cost of attendance.