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    Most Greek children never went to school at all. Girls,
    to begin with, always stayed with their mothers until they were married,
    either at home or working
    in the fields. Slaves,
    whether boys or girls, also could not go to school, and many children
    in ancient Athens and Corinth and
    other Greek cities were slaves. Any boy who was poor, even if he was
    free, also could not go to school: his family
    could not afford to pay the teacher, and besides they needed the boy's
    work at home. There were no public schools.
    Another Greek school. The students stand before the teachers.
    Still, people who could spare the money did try to
    send their boys to school, because without learning to read and write
    and generally becoming educated, boys could not hope to participate
    in politics when they grew up.
    Greek schools were small. They had only one teacher
    and about ten or twenty boys. Boys began going to school when they were
    about 7 years old, and went until they were about 13.

    In school, boys learned to read and write, and also memorized large
    amounts of Homer's Iliad
    and Odyssey. They learned to
    play the lyre (the kithara) and
    the pipes (the aulos), and to sing.

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