What Did You Learn in School Today? | Paul Delnero, Johns Hopkins

What Did You Learn in School Today? A Day in the Life of Mesopotamian Student.
Paul Delnero, Johns Hopkins University
There is a wealth of evidence for education in ancient Mesopotamia exceeding that of any culture or period of the ancient or pre-modern world. At the city of Nippur, the religious center of Mesopotamia in the early second millennium BCE, and at "House F" in particular, the entire sequence of lists and texts that were taught to pupils learning to read and write can be reconstructed from the beginning until the end of their training. By studying the thousands of exercise copies produced by Mesopotamian pupils at different stages in their education a vivid picture emerges of not only what students learned, but also how and why they learned it. In this talk an overview of what has, and what can still be discovered by examining the discarded homework of pupils almost 4000 years ago will be presented to paint a portrait of a day in the life of a Mesopotamian student.
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Пікірлер: 5

  • @bookwyrms.2658
    @bookwyrms.26586 ай бұрын

    Interesting! Thankyou for a different slant on learning scripts.

  • @AntonioCorey
    @AntonioCorey6 ай бұрын

    Just love this was my favorite subject in school

  • @vecvan
    @vecvan6 ай бұрын

    35:40 no what it tells you is they had pockets the size of a small tablet, like a smartphone. It's self evident.

  • @azul_atx1110
    @azul_atx11104 ай бұрын

    Starts at 3:39

  • @panaceiasuberes6464
    @panaceiasuberes6464Ай бұрын

    Passing notes in classes between students should be a bore in the Sumerian classroom. To write the note, go cook it unoticed, come back with the tablet, find a way to pass it without the teacher seeing and braking it... oh, the horror... the horror. One thing that favoured the monarch with this kind of writing is that no one could go to a city wall and write this stuff because where do you have public wet clay walls just waiting to be pressed? Nowhere!