| Pali Summer School with Prof Richard Gombrich |
|
|
|
| Sunday, 06 June 2010 | |
Pali Summer School with Prof Richard Gombrich
14-26 August 2010 - Pali Summer School with Prof Richard GombrichCost £475 The Society for the Wider Understanding of the Buddhist Tradition (So-Wide) offers an intensive Pali course this summer, 14-26 August inclusive. Aim. Is this really possible? I devised the course and have already given it five times with great success. Pali can be learnt in twelve days because the aim is only to read it, not to write or speak it û though you do learn to pronounce it and recite a few chants. There is also much less emphasis on memorisation than in a traditional course: why memorise things you can easily look up? Method. You are strongly encouraged to buy your own copy of the Dictionary. If you live overseas and do not want to carry it to Oxford, you may ask the Pali Text Society, when you buy it, to post it to you at the OCBS Office (address below). Students and teachers sit round a table together throughout the course. Students are urged to keep asking questions, and to work in cooperation. Organisation. The rest of the course is extremely intensive. It is cumulative, so that to miss an early lesson is disastrous. The one rigid rule is that no one may miss a class in the first week. We shall work out the precise timetable when we meet, but the general pattern will be that there will be classes each day from 9.30 to 5.30, with a long lunch break. There will be homework every evening. The course will end at mid-day on Thursday 26th; I hope we can then all lunch together. Content. Practical Arrangements. There are cooking facilities at Clive Booth Hall, at no extra charge. There are bar and cafeteria facilities, including breakfast, on the Gipsy Lane site, except on Sundays, and we shall ourselves maintain a supply of tea and coffee in the lecture room. The charge for the bedroom is ú25.00 per night, payable in advance for the whole course. My tuition and course materials are provided free, but we have to pay for some teaching assistance, the lecture room and some other expenses. We are therefore charging each student ú150.00. Since this sum will not entirely cover our expenses, any further donation will be very welcome. Booking. Admittance will be first come, first served. No more than 14 will be admitted, so hurry to book a place. Richard Gombrich |
| < Prev |
|---|



