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MillennialChild.com |
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Essential Conferences for Summer, 2008
NEW: Discover Waldorf Education, an introductory video on YouTube.
NEW: To view Grade Six Geometry, another YouTube video, click here.
Reading and Writing, The Waldorf Approach - click here to view this 20-minute
Eurythmy - Making Movement Human - view excerpts
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
NEW: Blinking, Feeling, & Willing
NEW: 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
Freedom of Choice or Freedom From Choice?
Helping Your Child's Teacher Communicate
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Trailers for Eurythmy: Making Movement Human
To view each trailer, click on its screen These trailers are linked to YouTube.com, but may also be viewed on GoogleVideo.com
Eurythmy as a Performing Art To view on Google Video, click here This excerpt showcases the Goetheanum Eurythmy Ensemble as they perform Sofia Gubaidulina's "Seven Words." Sam Russell's camera work and creative editing capture the poetic quality of the group's movement. A voiceover by Eugene Schwartz gives an overview of the significance of eurythmy for our time. Look at Eurythmy in Waldorf Education to see the way in which eurythmy is used as a pedagogical tool.
Eurythmy in Education To view on Google Video, click here Eurythmy, as applied in Waldorf schools throughout the world, is a valuable educational tool. Today's children need to move, and eurythmy guides their movement to both great works of music and poetry. In this excerpt from a longer DVD, Sam Russell's camerawork captures the beauty and joy of eurythmy classes in three Waldorf schools: Green Meadow Waldorf School, the Waldorf School of Princeton, and Kimberton Waldorf School. We see Maria ver Eecke teaching first and fifth graders (with commentary by Wendy Kelly), Tertia Gale teaching eighth graders, and Raymonde Fried teaching eleventh graders. View Eurythmy as a Performing Art to see an example of this new art form on the stage.
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