Teaching dialogues in Latin is basic to the methodology of Charleston Latin. One of the primary objectives of the teacher-training workshop is to prepare teachers who have had no prior experience with Latin to conduct simple dialogues in Latin. In a workshop participants learn a series of classroom management expressions which in fact serve as a lesson plan or “ template” that can be used to teach any dialogue in any lesson. The following describes how this template works.

Dialogues generally consists of one question and one answer. A simple example in English is: “Who is this?” “ This is Marcus.” In the individual lessons of the Teacher’s Guide, Marcus et Julia, there are narrative instructions that guide teachers through the presentation of the dialogues. If a teacher follows the methodology outlined here, he or she may will need to rely on the narrative instructions in each lesson.

Dialogues are taught in three stages. In the first stage, students listen as the teacher utters the target sentence (an answer to a question), and then after having listened to the teacher for a while, students mimic what the teacher has been saying. In the second stage, the teacher asks a question which is designed to elicit from students the target sentence as an answer. Students learn the meaning of the question and its answer through the use of visual cues, dramatization or other clues. In the third stage, the teacher checks the students’ comprehension of the dialogue by asking students to translate the dialogue from English into Latin and then from Latin to English. Teachers use Latin classroom management expressions to direct students through these three stages.

The following sample is from LECTIO XIX page 47 of the Teacher’s Guide, Marcus et Julia. The lesson’s objectives are:

1. To identify terms associated with a Roman family.

2. To name and describe two members of a Roman family.

The activities to accomplish these objectives include conducting the following two dialogues:

Marcus est.
Quis est?
Marcus est.
This is Marcus.
Who is this?
This is Marcus.
Marcus est puer.
Quis est Marcus?
Marcus est puer.
Marcus is a boy.
Who is Marcus?
Marcus is a boy.

Typical narrative instructions to the teacher for teaching these dialogues would be:
  1. Tell the students that they are going to meet members of an ancient Roman family and that the first member of the family that they will meet is Marcus, a Roman boy.
  2. Hold up the picture of a Roman boy (Visual Cue #1), and teach the above dialogues. While students listen, point to the boy in the visual cue and say Marcus est. Repeat this several times until the students seem to be comfortable with the sound of Marcus est. Then have students repeat several times after you Marcus est. Then have the class listen while you point to the boy and ask the question Quis est? Repeat the question several times while continuing to point to the boy. Then say Quist est? and pretending to be another person answer Marcus est. Do this several times until students seem to understand that you are asking a question and giving an answer to that question. Then look at the class, say Quis est? and motion for the class to answer your question. The class should respond Marcus est Address the question to groups and individuals and elicit the answer.
  3. Point to Visual Cue #1 again and say Marcus est puer. While walking around the room, touch a boy on the head and say puer. Do this to several boys. Then ask everyone who is a puer to stand up.
  4. Hold up the visual cue, point to the boy, tell the students to listen, and say Marcus est puer. Repeat this several times until the students seem to be comfortable with the sound of Marcus est puer. Then have the students repeat several times Marcus est puer. Then have the class listen while you point to the boy and ask the question Quis est Marcus?. Repeat the question several times while continuing to point to the boy. Tell the class to continue to listen. Then say Quis est Marcus? and pretending to be another person answer Marcus est puer. Do this several times until students seem to understand that you are asking a question and giving an answer to that question. Then look at the class, say Quis est Marcus? and motion for the class to answer your question. The class should respond Marcus est puer. Address the question to groups and individuals and elicit the answer.
Instructions for checking comprehension are not given in the Teacher’s Guide.It is assumed that teachers will simply ask students what the Latin means in English or ask them to give the Latin equivalent of English sentence or word.

It is highly recommended that teachers use Latin classroom management expressions to conduct these dialogues. For example when a teacher wants students just to listen to what is being said, the teacher says audite. When a teacher wants students to repeat something, the teacher says repetite for more than one student to repeat or repete for just one student to repeat. When a teacher wants students to answer a question, the teacher says respondete for more than one student to respond or responde for just one student to respond. Using the simple classroom management expressions, the above dialogues are taught in the following way:

The first stage (when the teacher wants students just to listen and then after having heard the utterance several times to repeat it) follows this pattern:


Teacher says several times:

Audite. Marcus est.

Students listen and remain silent.



Teacher says to students several times (plural):

Repetite. Marcus est.

Students repeat:

Marcus est.

Teacher says to one student:

Repete. Marcus est.

One student repeats:

Marcus est.


Stage two (students listen while the teacher asks a question and pretending to be someone else answers it, and then when the teacher poses the question to the class, the class answers it) follows this pattern:


Teacher says several times:

Audite. Quis est? Marcus est.

Students remain silent.



Teacher says several times to students (plural):

Respondete. Quis est?

Students respond:

Marcus est.

Teacher says to one student:

Responde. Quis est?

One student responds:

Marcus est.


Stage three (teacher checks comprehension by asking students to say what the English means in Latin or what the Latin means in English) follows this pattern:

English to Latin:


Teacher says several times to students (plural):

Respondete. Quo modo Latine dicitur, This is Marcus?

Students respond:

Marcus est.

Teacher says to one student:

Responde. Quo modo Latine dicitur, Who is this?

One student responds:

Marcus est.

Teacher says several times to students (plural):

Respondete. Quo modo Latine dicitur, Who is this?

Students respond:

Quis est?

Teacher says to one student:

Responde. Quo modo Latine dicitur, Who is this?
One student responds:

Quis est?

Latin to English


Teacher says several times to students (plural):

Respondete. Quo modo Anglice dicitur, Marcus est?
Students respond:

This is Marcus.
Teacher says to one student:

Responde. Quo modo Anglice dicitur, Marcus est?
One student responds:

Who is this?
Teacher says several tiems to students (plural):

Respondete. Quo modo Anglice dicitur, Quis est?
Students respond:

Who is this?
Teacher says to one student:

Repete. Quo modo Anglice dicitur, Quis est?
One student responds:

Who is this?


The Latin classroom management expressions used to conduct the dialogue Quis est? Marcus est. serve as a template for teaching any dialogue. Below such a template is used to prepare a lesson plan for the second dialogue in LECTIO XIX Quis est Marcus? Marcus est puer. On the left side of the template classroom management expressions introduce appropriate elements of each new dialogue. On the right side the intended reactions from students are outlined. In conducting the dialogue the teacher repeats each step in the three stages as often as necessary to assure that all students master the material. In addition, an explicit comprehension check is made. Most importantly the teaching of the dialogue is conducted entirely in Latin. This captures students' interest and enhances the foreign language component of the program.


Here is a template in PDF format to use as a guide.
To conclude, here is a blank template or lesson plan that can be followed in teaching any Latin dialogue.
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