I have copied the online course catalog/descriptions from
Roxbury Latin School below. Now, select an appropriate number of classes you plan to teach next year. Choose three
from your subject area, unless specified. Later, you will need to select which extra-curricular activities you will advise.
SCIENCE (choose three classes)
Natural Design - The course begins with a discussion of the forces of tension and compression in various arches (Gothic, Roman, Catenary), and group construction projects on campus follow.
Physical Science - The course is devoted to the study of matter.
Biology - The course begins with introductions to chemical and biochemical reactions and biological evolution. Frequent laboratory exercises advance and illustrate the conceptual material.
Physics - Students in Physics explore the structure and animating forces of the natural world.
Chemistry - The courses incorporate introductory lab exercises and a thorough study of chemical stoichiometry, gas laws and kinetic theory, qualitative advanced views of electronic structure in atoms and and some organic chemistry.
Environmental Science - Students examine the challenges facing varied environments and ecosystems and the people who depend on them throughout the world.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE (choose one sequence)
French 1 / 2 / 3 / 4 - French
Spanish 1 / 2 / 3 / 4 - Spanish
Latin 1 / 2 / 3 / 4 - Latin
Greek 1 / 2 / 3 / 4 - Ancient Greek
LANGUAGE ARTS (choose three classes)
English 1 - Among the works considered are the following: Conrad, Heart of Darkness; Shakespeare, King Lear; Sophocles, Oedipus Rex, Oedipus at Colonus, and Antigone; Tolstoy, The Death of Ivan Ilych.
English 2 - Among the works studied are the following: Transcendentalism: Essential Essays of Emerson and Thoreau; Conarroe, Six American Poets; Gioia and Gwynn, The Art of the Short Story; Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby; Hansberry, A Raisin in the Sun; Morrison, Song of Solomon; Norris, Clybourne Park; Shakespeare, Hamlet; Twain, Huckleberry Finn.
English 3 - Works considered include the following: Gioia and Gwynn, The Art of the Short Story; Chekhov, The Seagull; Coleridge, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner; Frost, Selected Poems; OāBrien, The Things They Carried; Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye; Shakespeare, Macbeth; Swift, Gulliverās Travels.
English 4 - Among the works studied are the following: Boynton and Mack, Introduction to the Short Story; Arp and Johnson, Perrineās Sound and Sense; Cisneros, The House on Mango Street; Hemingway, In Our Time; Homer, The Odyssey; Knowles, A Separate Peace; Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet.
English 5 - Works considered include the following: Lee et al., Grammar for Writing; Arp and Johnson, Perrineās Sound and Sense (poetry); Sisko, American 24-Karat Gold (short fiction); Gaines, A Gathering of Old Men; Golding, Lord of the Flies; Hemingway, The Old Man and the Sea; Lawrence and Lee, Inherit the Wind; Masters, Spoon River Anthology; Shakespeare, Julius Caesar.
English 6 - The following books are studied in the course: Lee et al., Grammar for Writing; Perrin, The Art of Poetry; Guthrie and Page, Little Worlds; Dickens, A Christmas Carol; Gibson, The Miracle Worker; Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird; Shakespeare, A Midsummer Nightās Dream; Steinbeck, Of Mice and Men.
MATHS (choose three classes)
Algebra 1 - The course emphasizes algebraic techniques, particularly factoring, solving equations, and analyzing linear functions.
Algebra 2 - Students explore functions more extensively, namely polynomial, rational, exponential, and logarithmic functions. Other topics studied include conics, sequences and series, and an introduction to trigonometry.
Geometry - Though different sections approach the subject in different ways, all sections develop results involving lines, planes, triangles, circles, polygons, perpendicularity, congruence, similarity, area, and volume.
Trigonometry - Students solve equations involving the sine, cosine, and tangent functions, and then investigate a wide array of real world applications
HISTORY / CIVICS (choose three classes)
Western Civilization - Units of study include Ancient Israel, Classical Greece, the rise and fall of Rome, the life and influence of Jesus, the transition from the Middle Ages to the Age of Kings in the context of the Renaissance and the Reformation, the French Revolution, ideologies of the 19th century, the Great War and the Russian Revolution, Nazi Germany and the Holocaust, and heroes of the twentieth century.
Spanish America - Course materials will include texts by Christopher Columbus, HernĆ”n CortĆ©s, Simón BolĆvar, Fidel Castro, Gabriel GarcĆa MĆ”rquez, and Hugo ChĆ”vez, among others, as well as films, documentaries, music, and visual arts.
Civics - This unit is designed to strengthen studentsā understanding of how government works and to explore ways in which individuals can, and do, make a difference through participating in, and interacting with, government.
U.S. History - Emphasis will be placed on three core themes: 1) constancy and change in economic and social realities; 2) watershed changes in American political life and interpretations of governmentās role in protecting life, liberty, and property; and 3) Americaās place in the world.
American Military Experience - The major themes to be explored will include: the relationship of the soldier to a variety of components within society and the military, the changing nature of war, the interaction of war and politics, the changing popular attitudes and expectations regarding war, and the significance of race and gender in military affairs.
Economics - Topics include the market system of economic organization, economic growth, productivity, the role of government, the financial system, inflation, unemployment, short-term economic fluctuations, exchange rate determination, and theoretical controversies.