Sunoikisis: A National Consortium of Classics Programs
Sunoikisis: A National Consortium of Classics Programs
Sunoikisis is a national consortium of Classics programs. Since 1999,
Sunoikisis has yielded new collaborative and interdisciplinary
paradigms of learning in the liberal arts for the 21st century.
“Sunoikisis” comes from Thucydides (3.3.1)
in reference to the alliance formed by the cities of Lesbos (Methymna
excluded) in their revolt against the Athenian empire in 428 B.C.E.
Likewise, this collaborative program seeks to develop a set of common
goals and achieve a degree of success and prominence that goes beyond
the capacity of a single program.
Sunoikisis enables students and faculty at participating institutions
to benefit from opportunities normally available only at large research
institutions, while maintaining the advantages of a small liberal arts
learning environment. The curricular elements within Sunoikisis include
inter-institutional collaborative courses, excavations, internships,
travel study, undergraduate research symposia, and faculty development
seminars.
The curricular elements of Sunoikisis expose our students to a wider
range of subject material and faculty than would be possible otherwise.
Indeed, the president of an elite northeastern college commented in
October 2004 that the Sunoikisis program surpasses programs offered by
large institutions in that the collaborative nature unusually enriches
it in terms of content and methodological approach. The program, by
providing a range and quality of opportunities for majors, prepares
students who choose to continue their training in graduate school to
compete with graduates from the leading research universities in the
country.
For more information about how Sunoikisis is impacting Classics education, read “Collaborative Classics: Technology and the Small Liberal Arts College” by Rebecca Frost Davis and “Chaos and in the New Academy” by Susan Frost and Aimee Pozorski.
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