Anne H. Groton

Anne H. Groton, Professor of Classics, Department Chair,
Director of Ancient Studies & Medieval Studies
(has taught at St. Olaf since 1981)

A.B. (Latin & Greek), Wellesley College, 1976
M.A., Ph.D. (Classical Studies), University of Michigan, 1977, 1982

Anne Groton is the author of several articles on ancient drama as well as two textbooks, 38 Latin Stories (co-authored with James May) and From Alpha to Omega: A Beginning Course in Classical Greek. She hopes to finish soon her commentary on Aspis ("The Shield"), a Greek comedy by Menander. Every other year she directs a student production of a Roman comedy by Plautus, performed in a musical mixture of Latin and English.

Groton has held an NEH Fellowship for College Teachers and spent a year as an Associate Junior Fellow at the Center for Hellenic Studies in Washington, DC. In 1995 she received the American Philological Association's Award for Excellence in the Teaching of the Classics. She is Past President of the Classical Association of Minnesota and a former member of the Board of Trustees of Eta Sigma Phi, the national Classics honor society. Her term as Secretary-Treasurer of the Classical Association of the Middle West and South, now headquartered at St. Olaf College, began in 2004.

In her spare time Groton bikes, plays the piano, composes music and poetry, and sings in a Renaissance chamber choir. Besides being able to get lost virtually anywhere, her greatest claim to fame is never having learned to parallel park.

Courses in 2008-2009: Semester I = Classics 241 (Greek and Roman Myth), Latin 111B (Beginning Latin I); Interim = Classics 251 (Classical Studies in Greece); Semester II = Latin 112B (Beginning Latin II), Greek 112 (Beginning Greek II)