<p>Is it possible for a student to study Latin independently if her high school offers only introductory Latin in certain years and the student hopes to major in Classics? If so, how would one do that?</p>
<p>my Ds 6-12 school offered 3 years of latin- one optional, students took the three years but then hired a tutor to continue.
You might check with Catholic schools- some still offer Latin ( and also with the instructor at the high school)</p>
<p>Talk to the Latin teacher first, see if it has been done. Then talk to the Guidance Counselor. There may be some on-line courses available, as another option, so do a computer search for those possibilities. There is a whole network of cyber-courses for students who either do not have options at their school, are isolated geographically, or are already traveling or working professionals. Good luck! Lorelei</p>
<p>Great advice. Thanks very much.</p>
<p>I've known a few students who have taken courses through Florida Virtual School. It looks like Latin I, II, and III are offered. And it also looks like you can study from outside the state of Florida. Here is the website:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.flvs.net/%5B/url%5D">http://www.flvs.net/</a></p>
<p>Thank you!</p>
<p>The EPGY online HS offers Latin through the AP level. I know that they encourage dual enrollment with the local HS, so it is probably possible to enroll for only one course. This would be a high quality, but expensive, option, probably with a virtual classroom. rosettastone.com also offers Latin, self-paced, much less expensive.</p>
<p>BYU Independent Study also offers latin.
<a href="http://ce.byu.edu/is/site/courses/index.cfm%5B/url%5D">http://ce.byu.edu/is/site/courses/index.cfm</a></p>