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Middle Childhood
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First Grade Readiness
Resources, Insights, and Tools for Waldorf Educators
Nancy Blanning, Editor
Spiralbound
$21.00 |
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Some history first:
In my more than 30 years involvement with Waldorf Education, I have not encountered a topic that generated more interest, anxiety, misunderstanding and bewilderment than the question of what really constitutes first grade readiness in a child.
In the early days, there was a tendency for educators to draw a line in the sand in relation to a child's age. Which line it was varied from school to school ("must be age 7," "must turn 7 in the first semester," "must turn 7 by the end of summer" and so forth). There was also "must have begun the change of teeth."
Of course, all of this missed a couple of very important points. The first was that Rudolf Steiner never once said that children are ready to learn to read "at age 7." What he said was that "sometime during the 7th year" they become ready - this means anytime after the 6th birthday, not after the 7th birthday. Then, there is the modern fact that (in my opinion) our lives have created conditions wherein child development has become a bit chaotic: children can begin to lose their teeth at, say, 4 years old, but don't seem to mature mentally so far as grammar school readiness is concerned until 7 or 8 years of age. While there are beautiful ways to pull this development together, it did leave the adults in a predicament of not knowing where to look for criteria that would offer the child the best possibilities of sound education.
Later on, there were a variety of coordination and drawing criteria that were sometimes applied, but understood by only a few and contested by others. Given that each school (and sometimes each teacher) had different requirements and assessments, it's small wonder that parents often looked at the process as arbitrary and poorly substantiated, regardless of everyone's best intentions.
Now, my review of this GREAT book:
Happily, all of this is changing through more research and broader understandings of child development needs. I have recently seen in the mainstream press many articles on the needs of young children that would have been at home only in a Waldorf school 30 years ago. And, with increased knowledge and awareness, it has become possible for a true flowering of understanding to arise within the Waldorf movement.
It is a flowering of understanding that Nancy Blanning has brought together in First Grade Readiness. This book is packed with the most comprehensive, detailed, sound and wholesome guidance about what first grade readiness really is and what teachers and parents should look for when considering whether or not a given child is ready to move into the world of abstract learning.
First Grade Readiness is both healing and inspiring. My feeling is that both educators and parents will be heard to sigh with warm relief upon reading it, it offers so much loving common sense and light-filled wisdom.
Read it, use it, share it.
Contents:
- Foreword
- Part One
- Reflections on First Grade Readiness - Nancy Blanning
- First Grade Readiness - Joan Almon
- Some Guidelines for First Grade Readiness - Nancy Foster
- School Readiness: A School Doctor's Perspective - Bettina Lohn, MSc
- What are the signs that my child is ready for school? - Michaela Glöckler, MD and Wolfgang Goebel, MD
- The Transition to Elementary School Learning: When is the right time?
- School Entry and the Consolidation of Developmental Processes - Audrey E McAllen
- The Development of Memory and the Transformation of Play - Louise deForest
- Creating Partnerships with Parents in First Grade Readiness Decisions - Ruth Ker
- Carrying the Transition to First Grade - Janet Klaar
- A Transition Group at the Edinburgh Steiner School - Melissa Borden
- Building the Bridge to the First Grade: How a Class Teacher Can Lead Children Gently into the Grade School - Kim Holscher
- The Lowering of School Age and the Changes in Childhood: An Interim Report - Claudia McKeen, MD; Rainer Patzlaff; Martyn Rawson
- Part Two
- Introduction
- Developing Our Observation Skills for Understanding First Grade Readiness - Ruth Ker
- The Red Queen: A First Grade Assessment Story - Valerie Poplawski, Celia Riahi, and Randi Stein
- First Grade Assessment Form
- The Red Queen Materials List
- Reverence List for The Red Queen
- A Therapeutic Educator's Approach: Keeping It Imaginative and Playfully Objective - Nancy Blanning
- First Grade Readiness Observation Form
- Equipment List
- Activities to Support Healthy Sensory Development
- Observation Forms for the Documentation of Development and Learning
- Observation Form for Early Childhood Educators
- Contributors
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The Developing Child
Sense and Nonsense in Education
Willi Aeppli
$16.95
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In this simple gem of a book, Willi Aeppli takes us to the
very core of the task of education. His is not a picture of
senseless cramming and memorization, but of service to each
child and to humanity. All who seek an education make the
greatest sacrifice, that of the self, all their gifts, and
their future. They have the full right to expect that this
self will be returned as a stronger and truer self. Aeppli
describes a curriculum that can make this possible. This book
develops not from theory, but from years of practical experience.
Willi Aeppli (1894-1972) was a master Waldorf teacher in
the Rudolf Steiner School in BAsel, Switzerland. He is remembered
as an excellent teacher who used his observations and daily
experience to enrich his classroom teaching.
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Encountering the Self
Hermann Koepke
Back in print!
$12.95
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Between the ages of nine and ten, as their I incarnates
more deeply, children often experience themselves for the
first time as separate individuals, different from their parents
and peers, and essentially alone. Hermann Koepke provides
a lucid and highly readable explanation of the outer signs
and symptoms of this essential turning point in the life of
a child. He demonstrates the significance of this crucial
moment by showing how the destiny and achievements of such
personalities as Dante, Heinrich Schliemann, Oskar Kokoschka,
Rudolf Steiner and Bruno Walter rest upon a fateful encounter
or event in their ninth year. |
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On the Threshold
of Adolescence
The Struggle for Independence
in the Twelfth Year
Hermann Koepke
$19.95
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Hermann Koepke guides us to an understanding of the often
tumultuous changes children undergo as they approach adolescence.
He does so in a very creative way: through the eyes and experiences
of a young teacher, Suzanne, as she endeavors to cope with
the difficulties she and her students' parents face: drug
use, smoking, apathy, rebelliousness, moodiness, and more.
As her class changes, she adapts her teaching. She learns
a great deal about these children, and in the process, teaches
us a great deal about our own preadolescents. The period surrounding
age 12 can be challenging and stressful to parents and children
alike - Hermann Koepke offers just the sort of living understanding
that can lead us out of the seemingly endless wilderness.
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Working with Anxious, Nervous and
Depressed Children
A Spiritual Perspective to Guide Parents
Henning Köhler
Introduction by Philip Incao, MD
Softbound
$18.00
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Henning Köhler courageously presents parents and teachers with a
practical path of schooling the thinking, heart, and will in selfless
devotion to the individual destiny of each child. This is a book every
teacher, parent and friend of children will want to read and consider
- it offers a way of receiving troubled children into our hearts, into
the stream of our love such that healing and forward movement become
possible.
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Hathor the Moon Cow
Sex Education - A Creative Approach
Alan Whitehead
$22.95
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I think this journey into human sexuality - and how to convey
its physical, social and spiritual realities and outcomes
to children (at around age 12 for direct teaching) is one
of the most refreshing approaches I've ever read. In the author's
usual humorous and relaxed style, virtually every topic of
importance is touched upon - actually, delved into far beyond
the surface - in a way that is open, engaging and utterly
unabashed. I can imagine this one volume being of enormous
help to both teachers and parents as they guide children into
a healthy adulthood. |
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