As an elementary student, one would study works such as Donatus, which was simply a manual of syntax that needed to be memorized. One would also learn morals from various books like the famous Liber Aesopi, Aesop’s fables, and Ecloga Theoduli, another moral tale pitting Truth and False.
Eventually, one would get into more advanced moral teaching and grammar, most notably the Doctrinale, which was an extremely long, about 2,650 lines, Latin grammar book. It was written c. 1199, and was the go to for well into the fifteenth century. Its "unrivalled completeness helped account for its popularity and longevity." There were a number of other works that came and went, such as Catholicon, by Giovanni Balbi, or Tobias, by Matthew de Vendôme. The books that were studied were almost entirely up to the discretion of the teachers of the local school.
Eventually, one would get into more advanced moral teaching and grammar, most notably the Doctrinale, which was an extremely long, about 2,650 lines, Latin grammar book. It was written c. 1199, and was the go to for well into the fifteenth century. Its "unrivalled completeness helped account for its popularity and longevity." There were a number of other works that came and went, such as Catholicon, by Giovanni Balbi, or Tobias, by Matthew de Vendôme. The books that were studied were almost entirely up to the discretion of the teachers of the local school.