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This useful volume presents a selection of Rudolf Steiner's
writings on childhood, alongside supplemental essays on sensory
development and imitation, suggestions for how to study Steiner's
work, and a discussion of the future of childhood. This is the
first time these texts have been collected together in English and
the commentaries draw on the many years of experience as educators
and teacher trainers of the editors.
Since 2006, specialists, doctors, psychologists, and therapists of
Parzival-Zentrum Karlsruhe have taken part in emergency education
crisis interventions, carried out by the organization Friends of
Friends of Waldorf Education. They work with psychologically
traumatized children and young people in war zones and disaster
areas, including Lebanon, China, the Gaza Strip, Indonesia, Haiti,
Kyrgyzstan, and most recently in Japan following the tsunami there
and the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster. Bernd Ruf, who heads
these operations, describes in his book in various ways the basics
of anthroposophically extended "emergency education," including the
anthroposophic understanding of trauma itself. In addition, he
describes processes and experiences, focusing on recent experiences
in Japan at the center of his descriptions. Educating Traumatized
Children offers much-needed insight into this little-known area of
education and healing for traumatized children and young people.
This book will be valuable not only for those working in areas of
disaster and armed conflict, but also for any teacher or parent who
is teaching or caring for a traumatized child.
This book collects lectures given in 2015 at the Goetheanum in
Dornach, Switzerland. 550 people from 46 countries, including
Waldorf educators, scholars, and professionals in a wide range of
fields, came together to work on current educational questions with
the goal of deepening our understanding of child and human
development. Claus-Peter Roeh of the Pedagogical Section at the
Goetheanum summarised the mood at the end of the conference: 'We
have tried, with great intensity and candour, to create a community
of awareness around various areas of education. The desire to
always keep the idea of a whole in mind while discerning the
individual was clearly apparent . . . Now we stand before the
challenge of further developing our collective work and newly
gained insights into the future.' Contributors include Florian
Osswald, Ursula Flatters, Susan Weber, Elizabeth Hall, Clara Aerts,
Reinoud Engelsman and Claus-Peter Roeh. These texts will serve as a
basis for further study activity and can contribute to a greater
collaborative activity in the Waldorf kindergarten and school
movement.
"Try to become one with the world--that will be the best and most
important 'program.' It is something that cannot be contained in
statutes but needs to burn in our hearts as a flame." --Rudolf
Steiner Following the widespread destruction of World War I, Europe
in 1918 was faced with political, economic, and social chaos,
especially in Germany. In volume 5 of his seven-volume biography of
Rudolf Steiner, Peter Selg focuses on the three years following the
"Great War" and Steiner's efforts to help restructure society in a
way that might avoid a recurrence of such a terrible calamity in
the future. He saw the root sociopolitical and spiritual causes of
the devastation and sought to change the flawed worldviews and
impulses that led to the hubris behind the World War. Rudolf
Steiner thus began to concentrate on various means to renew and
invigorate society, both through immediate measures--especially in
his plan for a "threefold social order"--and through the new form
of pedagogy that came to fruition with the Waldorf education
movement. Steiner saw that a renewed form of education was
necessary to the development of peaceful and healthy social
conditions in the future. This education was intended to help
children grow into responsible, free, and imaginative adults. This
was a time of intense work for Rudolf Steiner, including a full
schedule of travel and lectures, reaching out to political leaders,
training teachers for the new schools, and working with theologians
and ministers toward religious renewal. Rudolf Steiner, Life and
Work, Seven Volumes Vol. 1. (1861-1890): Childhood, Youth, and
Study Years (ISBN: 9781621480822 Pbk - ISBN: 9781621480839 Hbk)
Vol. 2. (1890-1900): Weimar and Berlin (ISBN: 9781621480853 Pbk -
ISBN: 9781621480860 Hbk) Vol. 3. (1900-1914): Spiritual Science and
Spiritual Community (ISBN: 9781621480884 Pbk - ISBN: 9781621480891
Hbk) Vol. 4. (1914-1918): The Years of World War I (ISBN:
9781621481577 Pbk - ISBN: 9781621481584 Hbk) Vol. 5. (1919-1922):
Social Threefolding and the Waldorf School (ISBN: 9781621481935 Pbk
- ISBN: 9781621481942 Hbk) Vol. 6. (1923): The Burning of the
Goetheanum (ISBN: 9781621482192 Pbk - ISBN: 9781621482208 Hbk) Vol.
7. (1924-1925): The Anthroposophical Society and the School for
Spiritual Science (ISBN: 9781621482321 Pbk - ISBN: 9781621482338
Hbk)
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