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July 7-18, 2008
Brochure and Registration Form (pdf)
Kindergarten
This workshop will focus
on ways to integrate language arts, number skills, music, storytelling,
movement, nature study, and arts and crafts within the curriculum of
the developmentally-appropriate
kindergarten. It will present aspects of the Waldorf approach applicable
in public school classrooms.
Introductory and Advanced Levels*
Teachers will learn to:
Create a nurturing environment for healthy development of the
senses
Cultivate creative play/activities in the classroom
Expand their awareness of current educational/brain research that
supports the importance of play and the arts as a foundation for creative
thinking
Develop childrens phonemic awareness through nursery rhymes
and poetry
Develop skills in storytelling, puppetry, and drama that enhance
crucial language development
Build strong foundations for later academics, including math and
science, that prepare the child to meet state standards
Joyfully celebrate the seasons with singing games, stories, and
a nature table
Appreciate the deeper meaning and importance of fairytales and
stories that cultivate cross-cultural awareness through activities that
develop movement, rhythm and skills
Make simple dolls and puppets, model with beeswax, paint with
watercolors, and create seasonal crafts
Deepen their understanding of the developmental needs of the young
child
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Grades 1-3 Grades
4-6 Grades 7-8
These workshops will demonstrate how teachers can creatively implement
an arts-filled, integrated curriculum for grades one through eight,
using practices developed in Waldorf education that are applicable in
public school classrooms. Introductory and Advanced Levels*
Teachers will learn:
Methods to integrate recitation, storytelling, drama, painting,
modeling, movement, and music into the teaching of history, geography,
social science, language arts, mathematics, and science
Innovative, practical ways to develop and strengthen literacy
and numeracy
How to awaken imagination and wonder, enlivening and expanding
the breadth of student learning
How to inspire and motivate students to reach high levels of achievement
and meet district and state standards
How to nurture emotional intelligence, kindness, and responsibility
in the classroom through character building activities
How to deepen and enliven the multicultural aspect of history
and language arts through stories, myths, folk tales, and legends of
various cultures
How integrated, arts-filled learning speaks to the developmental
needs of all children, including those with special needs, addressing
the full spectrum of learning styles
How an experiential, integrated approach can benefit multilingual
classes and English language learn
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Specific
subject areas may include:
Grades 1-3
Folk Tales, Native American Stories Math
Nature Study, Introduction to Science Language Arts
Cultural Studies: food and shelter from around the world
Grades 4-6
Eco-systems, Botany Math and Geometry
California and U.S. History/Geography Language Arts
Ancient Civilizations: Egypt, India, Greece Science
Grades 7-8
Math, Perspective Drawing, Geometry Language Arts History:
Renaissance, Reformation,American World Geography
Science: Physics, Chemistry,Anatomy, Meteorology, Nutrition |
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What Leading Educators Have Said . . .
I believe that Waldorf education possesses unique educational features
that have considerable potential for improving public education in
America. . ..Waldorf schools provide a program that . .. not only
fosters conventional forms of academic achievement, but also puts
a premium on the development of imagination and the refinement of
the sensibilities.
Elliot Eisner,
Professor of Education and Art, Stanford University;
Past President, American Educational Research Association
Waldorf education embodies
in a truly organic sense all seven of the intelligences that Harvard
psychologist Howard Gardner speaks about in his Theory of Multiple
Intelligences: Linguistic, Logical-Mathematical, Musical, Bodily-Kinesthetic,
Spatial, Intrapersonal and Interpersonal. . . Steiner had the breadth
of vision seventy-five years ago to see something that educators
are now waking up to. . . And Steiners vision is a whole one,
not simply an amalgam of the seven intelligences. Many schools are
currently attempting to construct curricula based on Gardners
model simply through an additive process (What can we add to what
weve already got?). Steiners approach, however, was
to begin with a deep inner vision of the child and the childs
needs and build a curriculum around that vision.
Thomas
Armstrong, Author
Multiple Intelligences in the Classroom and Awakening Genius
One of the strengths of the Waldorf curriculum is its balance
and depth: the emphasis on the arts ... the rich use of the spoken
word through poetry and storytelling. .. Above all, the way the
lessons integrate traditional subject matter is, to my knowledge,
unparalleled. ..Those in the public school reform movement have
some important things to learn from what Waldorf educators have
been doing for many years. Its an enormously impressive
effort toward quality education.
Ernest Boyer,
Former U.S. Commissioner of Education;
Former President, Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of
Teaching
Waldorf
is healing education. . . It is with a sense of adventure
that the staff of Milwaukee Public Schools embraces the Waldorf
concept in an urban multicultural setting. It is clear that
Waldorf principles are in concert with our goals for educating
all children.
Robert
S. Peterkin, Director of Urban Superintendents
Program
Harvard Graduate School of Education;
Former Superintendent of Milwaukee Public Schools
What Institute
Participants Have Said . . .
This institute has given me more insight into child development
than any other professional development I've participated
in over the past 15 years. It has reinforced that learning
is a joyful event and I'm leaving with a renewed sense of
the power of teaching.
Donna
Stottman,
Jefferson County Public Schools, Louisville, KY
These
ten days have profoundly transformed our lives and renewed
our commitment to children. ...We laughed, we sang, we
did poetry and storytelling. While all this looked and
felt like fun, learning was happening on the deepest level.
. .. Once again, we are passionate about teaching.
Susan
Sheridan & Claudia Miller,
Oakland Public Schools, CA
This was undoubtedly the finest educational experience I have
ever had. I felt that so much of my own potential was opened up
in areas that I would not have expected.And it was beautiful to
see how others as well as myself had the experience of hidden
and unexpected talents blossoming and new interests awakening.
This is definitely the way we should be teaching.
Robert
Jamison, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics, Clemson University
I have been teaching for 30 years and have two Master's Degrees
as well as seven teaching credentials; this is one of the best courses
I've ever taken. The methods presented are especially useful for
the at - risk children I teach.
Seyedeh
Dehghan, Success Academy, Sacramento City Unified, CA
This has been an incredible journey. I'm grateful for two weeks
of immersion in a joyful, thought provoking and actively engaging
learning experience; I think all teachers should be required to
experience a course like this prior to credentialing.
Eileen
Keane, Birch Lane Elem., Davis Joint Unified, CA
Every teacher and administrator should attend this institute.
What a great way to gain insight into the development of the
child and how we as educators can aid in fostering a nurturing,
healthy environment and curriculum for the child.
William
Grange, Journey School, Capistrano Unified, CA
In
my sixteen years of teaching, I have never attended a more valuable
training.
Sally
Grimsrud, Village School, Eugene, OR
My second visit was just as valuable as the first. The four weeks that
I have invested in attending these institutes have been the best academic
experience I have ever had. Thank you for this gift. It has changed
my life and my classroom forever.
Melanie
Holliday, Jefferson County Public Schools, Louisville, KY
I have just spent two of the most enjoyable weeks of my summer.
Though the institute lasted only two weeks, the teaching techniques
learned will stay with me my entire teaching career. Each day
students were treated to motivating lectures, uplifting singing,
movement games, and the opportunity to experience many other Waldorf
methods that could be applied to public school teaching.
Annette
Miller,
Madison Elem. Roseville, CA
This is
the most balanced, useful, soul-feeding teacher training I have enjoyed
in all my 25 years of teaching. Thank you for the depth of caring, knowledge,
humor, and integrity you offered us.
Karen Loyster,
La Vida Charter, Ukiah Unified, CA
The institute has been a turning point in my 30 plus year
career. This has been a groundbreaking experience for me and
has brought into action what I have been dreaming of for over
10 years. It materialized my dream.
Jan
Dawson, Mark
West Union School District, Forestville CA
This
institute was incredibly valuable. It helped me to redefine
not only how I think about children and education, but also
how I think about myself. This was such an eye, heart, mind,
body, spirit opening and expanding experience. I overcame
several blocks and did things I would not have thought I could
love so much.
Tara
Kintz, East
Bay Conservation Corps Charter, Oakland, CA
I enjoyed the diversity of artistic expressions we were
engaged insong, dance, drawing, painting, playing
an instrument, knitting. The instructors were masterful
at integrating these experiences into the teaching methods.
I only hope that I can give as much joy and beauty to my
students as you have given to me.
Kateri Simonds,
Bennie Elementary, Allen Park Schools, MI
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For
information: please contact Arline Monks
(916) 961-3932 at Rudolf Steiner College
WALDORF
APPROACH IN THE PUBLIC SCHOOL CLASSROOM
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