The Importance of Storytelling in a Waldorf School

Written by Marcie Follett, Trinus´ Early Childhood teacher

Starting with simple stories in Early Childhood children hear many stories through the years: fairy tales,folktales,fables, myths, legends and stories from history, spoken aloud by the teachers and transmitted heart to heart.

Storytelling helps develop speech. By being aware of one’s speech when telling a story, adults are modeling clear speech, building a child’s vocabulary and helping them develop language skills. The ability to understand speech comes before reading and writing, so we are exposing children to rich language before grade school.

Storytelling

A morning in a Waldorf Early Childhood almost always includes a story, which may either be told or presented as a puppet play- usually a nature story, a fairy tale or a folk tale. Stories are told by the teacher “by heart” rather than told by memory because Waldorf Teachers aim to tell stories with love from the heart. Of course, a teacher memorizes the story but once it is committed to memory it allows the teacher freedom to make the story their own and to tell the story with joy. It is common for Waldorf Teachers to tell Grimms fairy tales. When these stories are told the teachers don´t “dumb-down the original language”. Through the rich language of fairy tales, children are building their vocabulary. Compared to mainstream school students, Waldorf Students typically have a more expansive vocabulary.

Waldorf Education

What is important to know is that a child will only imagine a picture in his mind that’s as scary as he can handle. For example: if we tell the story of The Three Billy Goats Gruff a three year old might imagine a troll that’s not much more than a blob, where a six year old might imagine a hairy, ugly troll with big teeth and ears. A Waldorf teacher will tell a fairy tale to young children with a gentle, pleasant voice, without over-dramatization. Again this leaves the child’s imagination free to picture the story to be as scary or as benign as he can handle.

Storytelling

Why Kids NEED Risky Play and How to Feel Safe Encouraging It!

Written by Avital from The Parenting Junkie

You hear it everywhere you turn, be careful you’re going to fall, be careful you’re going too fast, be careful you might slip… but is this concern over safety actually helping our children?

Here’s why kids not only love risky play but desperately NEED it and how you can keep your cool allowing them to take appropriate risks.

Everywhere we look our children seem to be drawn to risky activities. Where they see fun we see danger signs.

In our culture we try to make things more and more safe, to almost bubble wrap our children. We’ve made it so safe that playgrounds today have become quite boring. They are not the same “hold on tight” or you’ll literally fall off the merry-go-round playgrounds they once were. On the surface this seems good, no one wants to see kids get hurt. But, our kids are now missing out on the physical and mental strength gained through challenging, risky play.

Children develop by playing. They push themselves through play, socially, emotionally, academically, and physically. This healthy development prepares them for adulthood which comes with risk-taking. Adults have to drive a car, cook with fire, cut vegetables, invest in the stock market, etc. Kids prepare for this by taking risks as they play.

We can’t learn without pushing ourselves out of our comfort zone. Kids learn their body limits and develop coordination when they are allowed to take risks, especially outdoors.

In her book Balanced and Barefoot, Angela Hanscom, shares with us that one of the main reasons there’s a rise in sensory issues in children is due to their lack of time spent outdoors in free play. Only one in two children today have the same level of core strength and balance that children typically had back in 1984. There are also a lot of muscle control issues for children today. This is directly caused by the fact that children are sedentary in a seated and directed lifestyle.

Kids today aren’t climbing trees, swinging on the merry-go-round or hanging upside down on the monkey bars. We think that we’re protecting them but this uprightness of their lifestyle directed by adults is causing a whole host of other problems. Hanscom and her colleagues are seeing a huge increase in lack of balance, lack of attention, lack of emotional self-regulation and an increase in aggression in their patients. “These symptoms are due in part to underdeveloped motor and sensory skills, which leave children underprepared for academics and overwhelmed by daily life and social situations.” Physiologically, when we don’t use our bodies in other ways, other than just being upright, such as tumbling, rolling down a hill, spinning around, doing cartwheels, then we actually lose our abilities to do those things. The liquid in our inner ear actually thickens which is why as adults we find it much less comfortable to go upside down.

Now, of course, we should and must use common sense and law-abiding rules, when it comes to safety for our children. You know what’s best for your child, and of course, not all risks are appropriate for all ages and stages, by any means. But, perhaps, isn’t engaging in some risky and physically stretching activities, one very good tutorial for keeping them safe in the long run? If you’re cooking with fire, and you get a little burn, while it’s not what anyone wants, you’re very unlikely to make that mistake again.

Risky play hasn’t been weeded out via natural selection because it’s important for our children’s safety. If you never put a baby on the floor it’s going to be harder for them to learn to crawl and then eventually walk. Humans, like a few other mammals, have really long childhoods. Animals with longer childhoods need that time to play in order to develop the skills they will need as adults.

If you find yourself always cringing when your child is going to take a risk here are 3 ways to help your child take meaningful and reasonable risks:

When we see a child doing something we think is risky our go-to response is usually “be careful.” But is that actually helpful information to keep them safe? If the floor is slippery and we simply say “be careful” are we letting them know the floor is slippery? Instead of saying “be careful” ask your child “do you feel safe?” You could also share your own feelings; “I feel nervous about that trick you’re trying to do, can you talk me through your plan?”

Embrace the fact that risk is a part of life. There are risks associated with all aspects of life; driving, flying, cooking, etc. We need to keep our own anxieties in check around our children and not make them feel that the world is a dangerous place. You can say “I can’t watch but go for it, have fun.” Fear doesn’t lead to logical risk assessment and evaluation. What helps us is good information and confidence to try. Our children also learn by making mistakes and learning from those.

Actively look for places where your children can take risks. While this is rare in our culture there are places such as Adventure Playground in NYC where children can take more risks.

Great Heights
Allow children to climb high. You can walk behind them just don’t hover over them and make it seem like it’s the most dangerous thing they have ever tried.

Rapid Speeds
Put on the helmet, knee pads, elbow pads, find a safe place and let your children go as fast as they would like.

Dangerous Tools
Show children how to use real adult tools. Teach them how to be safe using the tool. Children want the satisfaction of using a real tool, not a toy. For younger kids, you can start them with plastic knives like these to learn how to cut before eventually allowing them to use a real regular knife.

Dangerous Elements –
Children are attracted to fire, smoke, water and we usually find ourselves saying, no, don’t touch. While we want to keep our children safe we also want to teach them how to master these elements. How to use fire safely. How to light a match. How to cook on a stove. How to stay safe in the water. If we avoid the elements our children will not learn how to be safe near them nor how to use them.

Rough and Tumble Play
Kids want to play rough and tumble. They want to have pillow fights and have play fights. In our culture we tend to say, no hands, no touching, no roughhousing, but kids need this type of play. We can allow our children to have this type of play with guidelines in place for when the play gets too rough.

Disappearing/Getting Lost
Whether it’s your toddler running into a crowd of people or you’re 12 year old wanting to go to school by themselves, kids are drawn to disappearing. This is not because they actually want to get lost but to disappear for a time. The rush they feel from being away from adult supervision for even a few moments. That’s why little kids love the game hide-and-seek, the thrill of being alone.

When children are allowed to take reasonable risks, they actually become safer.
Through the risks they take, they develop a better ability to assess risk, use critical thinking, and to troubleshoot when problems arise. All of the experience they’ve gained through this risky play leads them to trust in their own bodies and developing confidence and sure-footedness. This is how we raise children who are resilient.

By allowing kids to take risks we raise kids who are reasonable, thoughtful, mindful risk-takers, neither too timid nor too ballsy.

“How can I trust my child is learning when there are no tests?”

By René Petersen

I believe this fear is beneath most questions we receive around our very “controversial policy” on formal testing. In this day and age, we want qualitative results in our hand and tests satisfy our need for information.

But what is the cost to our children? So much research has been done into the growing rates of CHILDHOOD depression, low self-esteem, suicide, anxiety, etc. and these can be found online. These studies have repeatedly found formal school testing to be one of the main causes of these illnesses in our children. Tests place an incredible amount of stress on children who are too young to be able to deal with it. And forcing them to do tests does not respect the child’s healthy development.

Waldorf kids

Waldorf Tests

It is worthwhile considering what we believe the purpose of testing is. As adults, we can all recall cramming for an exam or test knowing that you would forget everything the minute the exam was over. Do we need grades only so that we can have a set of tangible results?

We believe that in primary there are many healthier and more fun ways to assess learning and progress. We believe that the will to learn is something we need to nurture, develop and instill in our children. Retaining knowledge at a level of interest is far more valuable than a set of facts quickly forgotten. We value the HEALTH of our children in all areas and therefore place their wellbeing above a set of results.

I will immediately state that children in Waldorf schools are evaluated and assessed constantly throughout the day, month and school year. It just looks different from the outside world as there is a multifaceted approach taken.

Learning Waldorf

The first and most important method of evaluation is close child observation. Children reveal many things through their gestures, words, drawings, tone of voice, eyes, bodies etc. Waldorf Class Teachers stay with their class over a few years. This means that at the start of the year the child is with a teacher who knows them and is committed to understanding them even more. In this way the teacher gets to really know a child’s weaknesses (academically, socially, and emotionally) and as such is able to address them. The teacher is also able to pick up quickly when there is a change noted which needs to be acted upon.

Teachers use various means of assessment which are fun for the children. From as young as Class 1 simple math games could be played with the group in which it would be very clear who is always behind/confused/lost. These progress to mental math sums disguised as fun word problems involving things of interest to the children. Individual work is monitored via the Main Lesson books. Here much is revealed in a child’s handwriting, drawings, pencil grip, posture when seated, listening and concentration skills, attention span, etc.

Instead of giving lists of words to learn for spelling we could write a paragraph or poem for the children to memorize- so they see the words in context, in an interesting way and are still required to spell the words.

Assesment Waldorf

In the later grades, homework is given which provides the teacher (and parents) the opportunity to see where a child is making mistakes or confused. In the classroom, 5 Math problems can be put up on the board and children would have to complete them in silence- independently. The result is the same- children are evaluated- but they do not feel under pressure, they could be excited even to show the teacher how much they know. It is small changes like this which totally change the evaluation experience for the child.

Children are assessed whenever they present projects to the class and during class reading when every child has a turn to read out loud. We see their grasp of grammar through their speech and free writing. We watch their kicking, running, balancing, etc. during play to see how well their physical body is developing.

Learning Math Waldorf

This level of observation requires hard work, thorough preparation and a deep understanding of Child Development from the teacher. The teacher is highly accountable and has to ensure they are acting within the requirements as set out by the Waldorf Curriculum and the Ministry of Education.

In my classroom, we speak about tests or challenges as an “opportunity to learn”. ThatI, as the teacher, would be able to check that I am teaching in a good way so that everyone understands. But mainly so that they, themselves, would be able to see what they need extra help with. There is no question around the fact that assessment and evaluation is an essential part of teaching. What we need to question is WHY we assess; HOW we assess; and whether or not we are assessing in the healthiest way possible.

Evaluation Waldorf

Balance Entre El Caos, Comenzando Desde La Niñez

Escrito por: Katia Saravia, co-fundadora Colegio Trinus.
Publicado en Look Magazine

Te pregunto: ¿Cuántas veces en tu vida has buscado vivir de manera equilibrada?, ¿qué es lo que te ha hecho falta para lograrlo?, ¿consideras que el balance fue algo que perdiste en el camino?

En lo personal, el desbalance en la vida es un tema con el que he venido luchando casi a diario en los últimos años. Me di cuenta que esto comenzó cuando los ataques de ansiedad vinieron a mí, y aunque al principio no logré identificar la relación entre ambos problemas, gracias a la introspección pude reflexionar y aceptarlo.

Fue en ese momento en el que determiné que debía analizar mi vida para descubrir desde cuándo era que esa inestabilidad me estaba afectando. Recordé que mientras estaba en la primaria tenía el tiempo libre para jugar con mis vecinos, y luego, conforme fui creciendo, mi horario en las tardes se fue saturando cada vez más; con estas memorias logré darme cuenta que mientras me hacia adulta el tiempo se me hacía más corto.

Con el paso del tiempo comencé a trabajar en un colegio, y allí terminé de comprender cómo es que en la actualidad queremos robarle la infancia a los niños. La sociedad nos ha hecho querer acelerar todos los procesos en la vida y así crear ‘pequeños adultos’ que sean maduros, que afronten la vida y que entiendan muchas cosas que a su edad no necesitan.

Lo que los menores de edad verdaderamente necesitan es más tiempo para ser niños. No los forcemos a que en determinado tiempo deben ser capaces de decir cierta cantidad de palabras o que deben ser los primeros en leer. Si lo meditamos bien, ¿cuál es la insistencia en esto?, ¿para qué?, ¿cuál es el beneficio que ellos obtienen con esto en un futuro?

En cambio, si se educan niños equilibrados se les está facilitando el tener una mente más flexible en un mundo tan cambiante como en el que vivimos actualmente, además de enseñarles a afrontar sus miedos y sentirse cómodos fuera de su zona de confort. Los niños aprenden por medio de la imitación, entonces al estar frente a ellos, debemos ser conscientes de cómo actuamos y qué decimos.

Como adultos, debemos trabajar en nuestra inteligencia emocional, y a partir de allí, tomar la responsabilidad de enseñarles a los niños desde que son pequeños cómo este equilibrio y bienestar se alcanza y lo que conlleva. Esto para que ellos no tengan miedo de estos procesos.

La educación que le brindamos a los niños es uno de los factores más importantes para poderles fundamentar una vida integral. Si ellos reciben una enseñanza puramente académica, van a estar desarrollando su lado intelectual pero estarán dejando afuera el lado social, emocional, físico y espiritual.

Con el pasar del tiempo, comenzamos a observar más colegios que optan por nuevos métodos educativos que toman en cuenta distintas áreas de la vida. Pasan de ser modelos educativos basados en lo académico, a modelos educativos basados en las verdaderas necesidades de los niños.

Por ejemplo, la pedagogía Waldorf se enfoca en desarrollar el lado emocional, social, físico y académico de los niños. La enseñanza de este método es a través de un aspecto tridimensional que involucra las partes del cuerpo, como las manos (físico), la mente (académico) y el corazón (emoción), cautivando a los alumnos en todos sus niveles de aprendizaje y también estimulándolos por medio de su imaginación y emociones.

El currículo de este sistema respeta las etapas de desarrollo de los niños. Cada año se introduce contenido acorde a las mismas. En cuanto al aspecto espiritual, no necesariamente se debe ver alineado con la religión, sino más bien con una cuestión moral de enseñarles la diferencia entre el bien y el mal.

Procuremos no saturarlos, ni con tutorías, clases de refuerzo, clases extracurriculares o deportes. Tampoco los sobre estimulemos con un cuarto lleno de juguetes que no saben ni cuál escoger. Démosles a los niños la oportunidad de que se aburran y usen su imaginación, así se sorprenderán de todo lo que pueden crear.

Considero que debemos dejar que los niños pasen tiempo con ellos mismos y conozcan sus emociones. Lo importante es compartir tiempo de calidad con ellos. Regalémosles la oportunidad de ser niños, educados, activos, emotivos, ya que tendrán toda una vida para ser adultos; todo a su debido momento.

Evaluating The Children In Early Education

Written by Carrie Riley, Trinus Early Chilhood Main Teacher

What I love about Waldorf education is just about everything! From the nurturing of the individual to the creative way we introduce more cognitive skills like math, reading and writing. One of the details I appreciate is how we evaluate our children in each grade. Today I’m going to share with you the process we use in early childhood at Trinus.

As a kindergarten teacher in a Waldorf school, my job is to teach to the whole child. I need to bring balance and rhythm to match the needs of each individual class. The mind, body and spirit of the child need to not only be respected but also encouraged. I need to set up the class to meet these needs.

Once I have set up the rhythm for daily, weekly and monthly classes I can start my individual observations on each child.

One of the first things I do is set up a home visit. These allow me to see a child in his own home and how he is there. I see where he sleeps and observe how he is at the lunch table. Does he need help with food? How is he managing the eating utensils? Is he allowed to get up from the table mid meal? And so on. This tells me right away what I can do to help build a bridge between home and school.

We encourage our children in class to try all foods, to serve healthy foods and support good table manners each meal. The bond and trust grows with each home visit and allows me to meet the child at their level and build the trust and bond between child, parent and myself, as a teacher.

As I am doing my observations, I take the following factors into account.

Drive: Do they complete tasks? Do they give up easily? Are they ready for school? Do they have energy for class?

Social Skills: Do they initiate play? Are they flexible with their play themes and different friends to play with? Do they only use TV or movie themes in play? Can they play with a variety of children in class, or favor just a few?

Memory: During free play, do they reenact the puppet shows? Do they sing the songs from circle time on their own? Do they recreate circle time by themselves with friends? Can they put toys away in a proper place? Can they remember the names of their friends? Do they remember the class rules? Follow 3 part directions?

Motor Skills: When painting, how do they hold their paintbrush? When eating, how do they manage their spoon or fork? Which hand do they favor? Can they stand on one foot? Can they cross their midline? Follow craft instructions?

Creativity/Imagination: Do they make up their own stories? Play themes? How do they solve problems? Can they work together to build something? Can they use open-ended toys in new ways?

Once a child and I have that trust, I can really start the evaluation process. As the children arrive, I will welcome them with a warm lavender-scented washcloth as I take their hands into mine. I notice if their hands are hot or cold, tense or open. I look into their eyes to see if they are tired, happy, sad or sick. I then speak to them so I can hear their voices and connect one on one with them before they go out to play with their classmates. I take notes on each child almost daily. I observe how they communicate with me and their classmates. My assistant will translate conversations between children that are happening in Spanish and I will encourage them to speak in English if I know they can. I observe their facial expressions when they walk into the room and when at play.

My goal is to set up their early childhood experiences in school as a positive one that will serve them in the years to come. They need to be able to communicate effectively, sit in their chairs until excused, raise their hands to be heard by the teacher, respect diversity, use the art tools correctly, have good use of their large and small motor development. The children will need to understand English and speak it by first grade so that the 1st-grade curriculum will be understood and embraced in our international school.

I am in touch with the grades teachers as well to communicate with my students’ challenges and strengths. We work on strategies together to ready them for 1st grade.

Each child should leave kindergarten ready to go onto the next step in their grade evolution. Happy, balanced and ready to learn.

Waldorf education surrounds the child with understanding, joy and warmth. Building a bond of trust and love helps the child believe in themselves.

Five Frequently Asked Questions About Waldorf Education

Colin Price has been a Waldorf teacher for the past thirty-five years and has been a class teacher in schools in England, Canada, and the United States of America. He wishes to preface this article with the following caveat:

The opinions expressed here are my personal opinions. I alone am responsible for the content of this article, which, although brief, will I hope to raise further questions in the mind of the reader. Waldorf Education can be approached and characterized in many different ways, and no one description can ever do it justice. Nevertheless, this approach to educating children does hold out great hope for a better world than what we human beings have managed to create so far.

It is easy to fall into the error of believing that education must make our children fit into society. Although we are certainly influenced by what the world brings us, the fact is that the world is shaped by people, not people by the world. However, shaping of the world is possible in a healthy way only if the shapers are themselves in possession of their full nature as human beings.

Education in our materialistic, Western society focuses on the intellectual aspect of the human being and has chosen largely to ignore the several other parts that are essential to our well-being. These include our life of feeling (emotions, aesthetics, and social sensitivity), our willpower (the ability to get things done), and our moral nature (being clear about right and wrong). Without having these developed, we are incomplete- a fact that may become obvious in our later years when a feeling of emptiness begins to set in. That is why in a Waldorf school, the practical and artistic subjects play as important a role as the full spectrum of traditional academic subjects that the school offers. The practical and artistic are essential in achieving a preparation for life in the «real» world.

Waldorf Education recognizes and honors the full range of human potentialities. It addresses the whole child by striving to awaken and ennoble all the latent capacities. The children learn to read, write, and do math; they study history, geography, and science. In addition, all children learn to sing, play a musical instrument, draw, paint, model clay, carve and work with wood, speak clearly and act in a play, think independently, and work harmoniously and respectfully with others. The development of these various capacities is interrelated. For example, both boys and girls learn to knit in grade one. Acquiring this basic and enjoyable human skill helps develop a manual dexterity, which after puberty will be transformed into an ability to think clearly and to «knit» together their thoughts into a coherent whole.

Preparation for life includes the development of a well-rounded person. Waldorf Education has as its ideal a person who is knowledgeable about the world and human history and culture, who has many varied practical and artistic abilities, who feels a deep reverence for a communion with the natural world, and who can act with initiative and in freedom in the face of economic and political pressures.

There are many Waldorf graduates of all ages who embody this ideal and who are perhaps the best proof of the efficacy of the education.

There is evidence that normal, healthy children who learn to read relatively late are not disadvantaged by this, but rather are able quickly to catch up with, and may overtake, children who have learned to read early. Additionally, they are much less likely to develop the » tiredness toward reading» that many children taught to read at a very early age experience later on. Instead, there is a lively interest in reading and learning that continues into adulthood. Some children will, out of themselves, want to learn to read in an early age. This interest can and should be met, as long as it comes in fact from the child. Early imposed formal instruction can be a handicap in later years, when enthusiasm toward reading and learning may begin to falter.

If reading is not pushed, a healthy child will pick it up quite quickly and easily. Some Waldorf parents become anxious if their child is slow to learn to read. Eventually, these same parents are overjoyed at seeing their child pick up a book and not put it down and become from that moment a voracious reader. Each child has his or her own optimal time for » taking off». Feelings of anxiety are picked up from parents concerned about the child´s progress. It is important that parents should deal with their own and their child´s apprehensions.

Human growth and development do not occur in a linear fashion, nor can they be measured. What lives, grows, and has its being in human life can only be grasped with that same human faculty that can grasp the invisible metamorphic laws of living nature.

Children who transfer to a Waldorf school are usually up to grade in reading, math, and basic academic skills. However, they usually have much to learn in bodily coordination skills, posture, artistic and social activities, cursive handwriting, and listening skills. Listening well is particularly important since most of the curricular content is presented orally in the classroom by the teacher. The human relationship between the child and the teacher is the basis for healthy learning, for the acquiring of understanding and knowledge rather than just information. Children who are used to learning from computers and other electronic media will have to adjust.

Those children who enter a Waldorf school in the middle grades often bring much information about the world. This contribution should be recognized and received with interest by the class. However, these children often have to unlearn some social habits, such as the tendency to experience learning as a competitive activity. They have to learn to approach the arts in a more objective way, not simply as a means for personal expression. In contrast, in their study of nature, history, and the world, they need to relate what they learn to their own life and being. The popular idea of “objectivity” in learning is misguided when applied to elementary school children. At their stage of development, the subjective element is essential for healthy learning. Involvement in what is learned about the world makes the world truly meaningful to them.

Children who transfer out of a Waldorf school into a conventional school during the earlier grades probably have to upgrade their reading ability and to approach the science lessons differently. Science in a Waldorf emphasizes the observation of natural phenomena rather than the formulation of abstract concepts and laws. On the other hand, the Waldorf transferees are usually well prepared for social studies, practical and artistic activities, and mathematics.

Children moving during the middle grades should experience no problems. In fact, in most cases, transferring students of this age group find themselves ahead of their classmates. The departing Waldorf student is likely to take along into the new school a distinguishing individual strength, personal confidence and love of learning.

This question often arises because of a parent´s experience of conventional school education. In most public schools, a teacher works with the class for one, maybe two years. It is difficult for teachers and children to develop a deep human relationship that is the basis for healthy learning if change is frequent.

If a teacher has a class for several years, the teacher and the children come to know and understand each other in a deep way. The children, feeling secure in a long- term relationship, are better able to learn. The interaction of teacher and parents also can become more deep and meaningful over time, and they can cooperate in helping the child.

Serious problems between teachers and children, and between teachers and parents, do arise. When this happens, the college of teachers studies the situation, involves the teacher and parents- and, if appropriate, the child -and tries to resolve the conflict. If the differences are irreconcilable, the parents might be asked to withdraw the child, or the teacher might be replaced.

In reality, these measures very rarely need to be taken. A Waldorf class is something like a family. If a mother in a family does not get along with her son during a certain time, she does not consider resigning or replacing him with another child. Rather, she looks at the situation and sees what can be done to improve the relationship.

In other words, the adult assumes responsibility and tries to change. This same approach is expected of the Waldorf teacher in difficult situations. In almost every case she must ask herself: «How can I change so that the relationship becomes more positive?» One can not expect this of the child. My experience is that with the goodwill and active support of the parents, the teacher concerned can make the necessary changes and restore the relationship to a healthy and productive state.

The class teacher is not the only teacher the children experience. Each day, specialty subject teachers teach the students handcrafts, a foreign language, instrumental music, and so on.

The class teacher is, however, responsible for the two-hour «main lesson» every morning and usually also for one or two lessons later in the day. In the main lesson, she brings all the main academic subjects to the children, including language arts, the sciences, history, and mathematics, as well as painting, music, clay modeling, and so on, the teacher does, in fact, deal with a wide range of subjects, and thus the questions is a valid one.

A common misconception in our time is that education is merely the transfer of information. From the Waldorf point of view, true education also involves the awakening of capacities – the ability to think clearly and critically, to empathetically experience and understand phenomena in the world, to distinguish what is beautiful, good, and true. The class teacher walks a path of discovery with the children and guides them into an understanding of the world of meaning, rather than the world of cause and effect.

Waldorf class teachers work very hard to master the content of the various subjects that they teach. But the teacher´s ultimate success lies in her ability to work with those inner faculties that are still «in the bud» so that they can grow, develop and open up in a beautiful, balanced and wholesome way.

Through this approach to teaching, the children will be truly prepared for the real world. They are provided then with the tools to productively shape that world out of a free human spirit.

Price, Colin: A journal for Waldorf Education, spring/summer issue 2003- vol. 12 number 1.

Second Grade, Time To Explore And Awaken The Strong Feelings.

By: Mr. Hans, teacher of Trinus

First Grade is the time for creating rhythm and a sense of oneness; in second grade, it is time to  explore the dual aspect of human nature as the children’s feelings awaken. Strong feelings of  sympathy and antipathy may be upsetting to parents, but they are necessary experiences for the  second grader to live through.

We seek  out stories from every culture that portray these feelings and share them with the children  through daily storytelling. We base much of the academic learning on these stories for a rich,  integrated learning experience. We choose multicultural animal fables, such as those from the  famous Aesop and Buddha, and from African and Native American lore to show the human’s  animal characteristics, also known as his lower emotions, pitted one against each other. The  stories speak to the children’s imaginations allowing them to form their own inner pictures of  right and wrong. We do not make conscious the moral of the story; instead, we let the children  work inwardly with it.

 

 

 

 

 

On the threshold of newly awakening intellectual faculties, the second grader is given ever more  challenging academic work, all presented in an imaginative, artistic manner. In language arts a  thorough study of phonics skills coupled with sight word acquisition is pursued as we write and  read short vignettes of the fables and stories. We learn spelling rules as we write, we work with  punctuation, grammar (nouns and verbs) and capitalization as we compose our writing, and we  read what we write. We begin to read from “readers” together and individually, reading first  prose or poetry we know by heart. Our speech work is continued as we learn by heart classic  children’s poetry and play lines. In the fall we will delve into cursive handwriting after studying  ‘running forms’ in form drawing class.In contrast to the animal fables, we also share the stories of great people, saints and  heroes/heroines, who have overcome their base, animalistic tendencies to serve others with the  greatest of intentions. We give the children a picture of how noble women and men have  discovered and expressed the human’s highest ideal.

 

 

 

We will review our first grade work and then carry out more complicated  mathematical tasks with the four operations using the vertical format that grown-ups use in the  second semester. Imaginative stories still form the basis for these problems. Memorizing the  multiplication tables as full sentences will now be our focus with the 2,4,7,8,9,11, and 12 tables  being formally introduced. Place value work into the thousands, regrouping in addition and  subtraction and simple long division are also slated for discovery. Of course, a steady diet of  mental math will be included each day.
 

 

 

 

Our science curriculum in the second grade continues to be experientially-based as we observe  and enjoy the four seasons through crafts, song, poetry, nature walks, stories, and gardening.  Beginning zoology is introduced as the children hear about the characteristic behaviors of a  multitude of animals, take care of our class animals and paint, model and draw animals. We will  take a few field trips to observe and experience nature as well. In gardening class the children  will continue to raise vegetables and flowers, learning about the seed cycle, composting,  seasonal changes and patience. They will also be planting a wheat bed that they will harvest in  third grade!

 

Daily singing and hopefully daily flute playing (once the flutes arrive) will occur along with a once  a week music class during which we will explore rhythms, percussion instruments, singing  games and dancing.The second grade is blessed to have a balanced movement curriculum this year in their weekly  schedule. Games and daily movement and sensory integration will guide the children through  exercises that build balance, coordination, rhythm, spatial awareness, grace, flexibility, physical  control, and cooperation.

 

 

 

Learn to Change the World

«Learn to Change the World» muestra la gente de todo el mundo que trabaja con la pedagogía Waldorf. La película es una serie, que muestra como la pedagogía Waldorf, con 100 años de existir, enfrenta los desafíos educativos de nuestros tiempos.

 

Durante la serie nos enseñan el encuentro, compromiso e inclusión de la pedagogía Waldorf, un aprendizaje que va más allá de la recopilación de información, se puede entender como una forma individual de buscar la verdad. Un enfoque  más allá de las fronteras sociales, religiosas y étnicas, ilustrado con el ejemplo de una escuela pública en Oakland (California), que se encuentra en un barrio desfavorecido, un jardín de infancia judeo-árabe y el centro escolar Parzival en Karlsruhe.

Te compartimos esta serie dividida en dos partes.

 

Class Five «Perfect Balance/Harmony»

By: Réne Petersen, Trinus teacher.

“….This year marks the pivotal point between childhood and puberty and for a short moment each child is poised at the crest of the wave, marking the end of the first part of their school years. They reach standards of work hitherto never dreamed of. They identify totally with their work; they spend time embellishing it, bringing it closer to perfection.”

 

 

In Waldorf schools, 5th grade is considered to be the “golden era of childhood”. 

This is the healthiest, most balanced time for the child. In a healthily developing child, everything within becomes balanced and focused on their rhythmic/feeling system. It is their last year of true childhood and is the perfect time to truly immerse them in the world of Imagination and to relish the Arts; before their fully conscious skills for critical thinking emerge more strongly. This is their most creative time and their movements and bodies become graceful and elegant. It is the year for beauty in all aspects of school life and the study of the Greek Culture is a key theme as the epitome of “beauty” in the evolution of humankind. It is also the time when their individuality is beginning to crystallise and truly awaken. 

Cognitively, children are more able to understand concepts and phenomena in a more realistic and reasoning manner. Understanding and the formulation of concepts now starts to come more out of their developing faculties for comprehending clear, matter of fact, abstract concepts. Out of their growing memory powers also comes a clearer sense of time. This greater awareness of past/future/planning etc., combined with their deepening feeling life, leads to the emergence of true conscience and responsibility. This is a time of rapidly flowering capacities e.g. the mastery of a musical instrument /true language skills/ particular talents, etc., in this year children make the transition from myths and legends to history and its emphasis on the individual. Children should also now develop a greater consciousness of the interrelatedness of life and the environment.  Intellectually and morally the child becomes truly ready for new challenges!

This is the time for us to enjoy, guide and support the children in a truly special way before the onset of puberty and the huge changes that brings for the child: physically, mentally and emotionally. 


Language Arts

Language is central to every subject we do, so it could be said that we never stop studying Language Arts. Every single Main Lesson block calls for children to recall, recite, memorise and express opinions and ask questions. Children are required to work on their writing, spelling, grammar as well as free writing. Reading is also presented in various forms e.g. poetry, texts produced by the class/teacher, extra learning etc. 

The Language Arts Main Lesson Blocks are special as we go more deeply into the grammar, structure and details of the English Language. 

This year the grammar learnt becomes more technical as we go into direct/indirect speech; active and passive voice; subject/object of sentences. 

Punctuation is extended further to grow knowledge of and the use of: hyphens, brackets, quotation marks, colon, semi-colon. Children will also be encouraged to use words to paint word pictures as the beauty of the English language and words is explored. This is a year where the beauty of the language comes through strongly in the stories, songs, prose, poetry which we will do in the classroom.

 


 

Mathematics

With the study of fractions in fourth grade, the children’s work in “arithmetic” came to an end, and what they learn from this point on is “mathematical,” involving less manipulation and more conceptualization. There are three goals in this year’s math work: the solidifying of those skills learned in the previous grades, learning to express fractions as decimals, and understanding some basic geometrical concepts.

We will review and continue practicing long division and multiplication. In fractions we will explore the 4 operations; simplifying fractions and equivalent fractions. Decimals will be introduced using simple problems in all 4 operations and converting fractions to decimals. We will also work with measurement and money problems to provide practical application of decimal concepts. 

 


 

History- Ancient Civilisations

This year children will be introduced to formal History starting with these Ancient Civilisations. In this period, world history/evolution (especially the Ancient Greeks) is mirrored in the biography of the 10-11 year old child. This was a time of absolute creativity, balance and harmony. Stories are told from each era to place the children in time and space. There is a focus on the people and characters of the time to help children connect to the past. 


Geography

Children will be learning about their country Guatemala as we extend their horizon further than what they see on a daily basis.  We will explore the geographical features of the country e.g. rivers, mountains, volcanoes, oceans, climate, regions, crops, produce, animals etc. We will also learn about the different departamentos, culture, people, food, commodities etc. 


Plant Study

In Class 5 Science we move closer to the Earth itself, studying the plant kingdom; next year we penetrate the earth itself, with the sixth grade Mineralogy block. Science is a great way to help children engage their senses to learn about, discover and understand the world around them. Rather than dissect plants and analyze the parts, the science approach used in the lower school stresses the healthy activity of the senses: the children learn most through what they can see, hear, smell, taste or touch.

Our methodology relies very much on the botanical work of J. W. Goethe, a nineteenth century researcher.  Goethe stressed the principle of metamorphosis in the life of the plant, i.e., the ever-changing forms of roots, stems, leaves and sepals that find their conclusion in flower and fruit. Plants act as the go-between between heaven and earth. The plant is the “mediator” of the air and the ground and as such possesses a balance which fits in very well with the developmental stage the children are in at this time. Main lesson book work will include drawings of plant parts and families, charts describing plants growth, compositions and poems about plant life. 


Man and Animal

We will do one Main Lesson to cover what we missed when we were a combined class.  This year we will focus on the specialisation of various animals in comparison to the human being. We will also place the animals in their environments and learn about different classes of animals e.g. mammals, reptiles etc. This detailed study offers opportunities for the child to develop his/her comparative, conceptual, and observational skills, and it provides additional material for artistic, dramatic, and language arts activities.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Form Drawing

In class 5, Form drawing leads to elementary geometrical drawings. This is the last year the children will be drawing shapes freehand as the compass/protractor as mathematical tools will be introduced in the following year. We give children a sense of the dimensions of geometry through the appreciation of both the rules which govern geometry; as well as the beauty of the forms which can be created. 

 

¿Cómo desarrollamos una mentalidad de crecimiento en nuestros niños?

Carol Dweck, profesora de psicología en Stanford y líder en el campo de la motivación, nos responde esta pregunta. Los resultados de su investigación muestran las herramientas para desarrollar en el ser humano una mentalidad de crecimiento, contrario a una mentalidad fija.  

Dr. Dweck ha demostrado cómo el elogio a la inteligencia puede socavar la motivación y el aprendizaje. Incentiva a todos los padres de familia y maestros, a enfocarse en elogiar el proceso en el que participan los niños, como su arduo trabajo, progresos, estrategias y esfuerzo. De esta manera, los motivamos a continuar aprendiendo y buscar desafíos. Alabar la inteligencia puede convertirlos en personas inseguras e indecisas al momento de tomar retos, por el miedo a no alcanzar un resultado favorable que refleje su inteligencia.

 

En Trinus nos enfocamos en evaluar el proceso, lo cual apoya a desarrollar la mentalidad de crecimiento y así los alumnos están más dispuestos a tomar nuevos retos. No etiquetándolos por su inteligencia, sino brindándoles la oportunidad de aprender y crecer cada día para lograr desarrollar todo su potencial.  

 

Les compartimos el vídeo de la psicóloga Carol Dweck, donde nos explica cómo desarrollar una mentalidad de crecimiento en nuestros niños.

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