Join this course to immerse yourself in Ancient Greek history. This course is taught in a fun & engaging way to help students find a love for the study of history.
Special Notes: If you want all of your children to study Ancient history together, this course fits into our 4-year History Cycle (matching grade school, middle school, and high school courses).
How to get the most out of The Glory of Ancient Greece with Phillip Campbell:
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Carefully read the course details below.
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Order the textbooks.
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Prepare a notebook for taking notes during lectures and readings.
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Students begin the course by clicking on the "Recording" and watching Mr. Campbell's lecture.
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Complete the Reading Assignment.
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Take the Quiz, which is automatically graded by the computer. Take to your parent to record the grade. If multiple siblings are taking this course, note that the quiz gives the grade of the last attempt.
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Complete essay assignments.
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If you need review, go back and watch the recording again, go over the Power Point, check your notes, and/or reread the assigned reading.
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Repeat until all 12 classes are complete.
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Once the course is completed to the parent's satisfaction, there is a Certificate of Completion at the end to be filled in for your records. Note that Homeschool Connections does not provide record keeping services.
Total Classes: 12
Class dates: Tuesdays, September 12 to December 12, 2023. (No class Oct. 31 or Nov. 21)
Starting time: 1:00 PM Eastern (Noon Central, 11:00 Mountain, 10:00 Pacific)
Duration per class: 55 minutes
Prerequisite: None. Recommended but not required: Foundations of Christian Historiography and Dawn of History.
Suggested Grade Level: 9th to 12th grade
Suggested High School Credit: 1 full semester Ancient History
Instructor: Phillip Campbell
Instructor Email: phicampiii@gmail.com
Course Description: This course will immerse students in the life and thought of the ancient Greeks, the founders of western civilization. The course will trace the history of the Greek peoples from their origins as bronze age warriors through their path to democracy and the ascendancy of the Greek empires under Athens and later Alexander. We will also focus considerably on the contributions of the Greeks to philosophy, politics and architecture and read primary sources from ancient Greek authors like Herodotus, Polybius, Plato and Euripedes.
Course Outline:
Class 1: Precursors: The Cretans, Ionians, Minoans and Myceneans in Greece of the Dark Ages
Class 2: The Emergence of Democracy: As the Greeks emerge from their Dark Ages, regional tyrants and kings are overthrown and replaced by democratic governments
Class 3: Principles of Greek Law: The experiments of Solon, Draco, Lycurgus and other Greek law-givers as they attempt to create a society both just and strong.
Class 4: The Persian War: The burgeoning Greek city states are put to the test as the mighty Persian Empire seeks to expand its power into Europe.
Class 5: The Golden Age: Greek literature, architecture and art in the Golden Age of Pericles.
Class 6: The Peloponnesian War: A generation of Athenian dominance comes to an end as the Athenians engage in a suicidal and futile war with Sparta that is fought all across the Greek world and leads to the fall of Athens.
Class 7: Greek Philosophy: Survey of Greek philosophy from the pre-Scoratics like Thales through the revolution of Socrates and Plato to the Peripatetics of Aristotle, Cynics of Antisthenes, Stoics of Zeno and the devotees of Pythagoras.
Class 8: Postwar Chaos: Sparta, Corinth and Thebes all struggle for dominance in the chaotic years following the defeat of Athens in the Peloponnesian War.
Class 9: Internecine Strife: Greek democracy fails as the leagues and alliances of the City States fall upon one another following the collapse of the power of Thebes.
Class 10: Mighty Alexander: Life and conquests and this most remarkable of all men, who brought the Greekculture to Asia and founded an Empire stretching from Greece and Egypt to India and Afghanistan.
Class 11: The Hellenistic Age: Examination of the triumphs and glories of the Hellenistic age, cultural and architectural, especially around the intellectual center of the East, Alexandria.
Class 12: Disslution and Collapse: How the rivalries and wars of the Hellenistic states of the East led to the fall of the Greek kingdoms and their absorption by the expanding Roman Empire.
Course Materials: The Greek Way by Edith Hamilton, ISBN-10: 0393310779; ISBN-13: 978-0393310771 (https://amzn.to/3inhV64), in addition to primary documents provided online FREE by Mr. Campbell
Homework:
Weekly readings and quizzes with a Final Exam. Quizzes and the final are auto-graded by the computer for immediate results. Estimated commitment: two to three hours per week.
- Teacher: Phillip Campbell