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2009 Essential Conferences for Grades 4, 5, 6, & 7

in Mancos, CO July, 2009

Watch our video!.

 

2009 Essential Conferences for Grades 1 & 2 in Kimberton, PA June, 2009

Visit our web site

 

Resources for Home Schoolers

 

Eugene Schwartz Biography

 

Eugene Schwartz Resume

 

NEW: Discover Waldorf Education, an introductory video on YouTube.

 

NEW: To view Grade Six Geometry,

another YouTube video, click here.

 

NEW:To view From Movement to Form, click here

 

NEW:To view From Story to Letter, click here

 

Reading and Writing,

The Waldorf Approach - 

click here to view this 20-minute

video on YouTube

 

Eugene Schwartz interview on Alaska Public Radio - listen to the hour-long program recorded on Rudolf Steiner's birthday, 2007

 

Eurythmy - Making Movement Human - view excerpts

 

Millennial Children-

listen to the entire lecture

 

Watch a Google Video of Eugene Schwartz's Introduction to Waldorf given in Izmir, Turkey, May 2006

 

Watch a Google Video of an excerpt from Eugene's lecture No Childhood Left Behind

 

Articles:             Blinking, Feeling, & Willing

 

High Stakes Testing & Waldorf Schools

 

Beyond Cognition - Children and Television

 

Do the Festivals Have a Future?

 

Assuming Nothing: Nature vs. Nurture

 

Handwork and Intellectual Development

 

ADHD: A Challenge of Our Time  

 

The Cry for Myth

 

Freedom of Choice or Freedom From Choice?             

 

Computers in Education      

 

Helping Your Child's Teacher Communicate 

 

The Sixth Grade Crisis

 

From Playing to Thinking

 

Demystifiying Adolescence

 

Verses for the Primary Grades

 

 

 

 

    

 

 

           

The Cry for Myth / 2

 

            I smiled, recognizing how weird my answer would sound. 

            “We tell a story,” I said, “In which the antagonists are given a mythical dimension.  That tends to objectify the experience.  In fact, in fourth grade we tell many Norse myths, in part because the Norse gods are the most argumentative and aggressive gods in world mythology — that, and their liveliness, provide an accurate reflection of the fourth grader’s own nature.  We don’t say very much directly to the children involved, but let them ‘digest’ the story and see the effect of their behavior as though it were happening to someone else.”

            The teacher looked skeptical.

            “And that works?” she asked.

            “It takes a few weeks,” I conceded, “Or a few months, or sometimes a few years.  But, yes, eventually it works.”

            “If you tell these kids a Norse story, they’ll just use it to make fun of each other even more,” she said, “And they probably won’t even listen in the first place.”

            “Oh, go ahead,” said her principal, “What have we got to lose?  Let him try it.” 

            Within a few minutes I was standing before the class, relating the tale of Loki’s jealousy towards Baldur.  The envious and spiteful Loki finds a way to kill the almost immortal Baldur, but, instead of being accepted by the Aesir, he is scorned all the more.  In the tried-and-true Waldorf method, I did not draw any link with the events of the morning as I told the story, and I did not look at the two girls involved, but rather spoke to the class at large.  They proved to be a quiet, attentive and completely involved audience. 

            Later that afternoon, as I was preparing to leave, one of the antagonists came up to me and handed me a piece of lined paper.  Upon it she had written her name, her school name, the date, and the following (spelling has not been corrected): 

NORSE GODS

 

ODIN = King

? ASGAARD

? THOR = King’s son

? AESIR = GODS BEINGS

? LOKI = Jokester

                    OF LIGHT

? BALDUR = Nice man

 

 Comments:  I think the story was nice and

                                  it had a good morale.

                                   Morale:  Should not be jealous enough

                                  to kill!

                                   P.S. Can you come again?

 

            Jean Bethke Elshtain, Professor of Social and Political Ethics at the University of Chicago, cites a story told by the psychiatrist Robert Coles “of a little girl named Ruby whom he met during the early days of desegregation”:

Coles became intrigued by the 7-year-old, who had to be escorted to school by federal marshals. She would get out of the car and be met by jeering mobs who shouted racial epithets at her. She would pause, bow her head for a moment, and then walk into the school staring straight ahead. He got to know Ruby’s family, and finally felt

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