Following a lecture of November 27, 1919 requested by the Basel Department of Education, sixty members of the audience invited Rudolf Steiner to return and deliver a complete lecture course on his approach to education. These lectures are the result. Rudolf Steiner begins by outlining the gradual development of the child with the help of spiritual forces and enlightened educational practices, which form the basis for Steiner’s approach to education. He describes the problems that modern educators face and provides practical solutions. Steiner explains the effects of morality on real freedom and how the development of a child’s will leads to a free, flexible ability to think. He describes the life-long effects that teachers have on children through the ways they teach in the early grades. The subjects of these lectures cover a broad range, from the threefold nature of the human being to the teacher’s responsibility toward their students’ future; from arts such as music and eurythmy to the problems involved in training teachers; from zoology and botany to language, geography, and history. Like many of Steiner’s lectures to public audiences, these are accessible and practical and provide a real overview to his ideas for renewing modern education.
Author(s): Rudolf Steiner
Edition: 2nd
Publisher: Anthroposophic Press
Year: 2002
Language: English
Pages: 288
RENEWAL OF EDUCATION......Page 1
Contents......Page 6
Foreword by Eugene Schwartz......Page 8
1. Spiritual Science and Modern Education......Page 18
Discussion......Page 34
2. Three Aspects of the Human Being......Page 38
3. Understanding the Human Being......Page 54
4. The Teacher As Sculptor of the Human Soul......Page 69
Discussion......Page 83
5. Remarks about Curriculum......Page 86
6. Teaching Eurythmy, Music, Drawing, and Language......Page 100
Discussion......Page 116
7. The Problem of Teacher Training......Page 122
8. Teaching Zoology and Botany to Children 9 - 12......Page 135
9. Dialect and Standard Language......Page 151
10. Synthesis and Analysis in Human Nature & Education......Page 168
11. Rhythm in Education......Page 183
12. Teaching History and Geography......Page 199
13. Children's Play......Page 216
14. Further Perspectives & Answers to Questions......Page 231
Appendix 1. Introduction to a Eurythmy Performance......Page 246
Appendix 2. Introduction to a Eurythmy Performance......Page 252
Notes......Page 258
Index......Page 266
Foundations of Waldorf Education......Page 280
Rudolf Steiner's Lectures & Writings on Education......Page 282
About the Author......Page 285