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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Search results 51 through 60 of 620

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298. Rudolf Steiner in the Waldorf School: Educational Practices in an Age of Decline and the Educational Practices of the Day to Come 11 Jun 1920, Stuttgart
Translated by Catherine E. Creeger

I would like to warmly welcome you here to this room, where we are gathered for the second time to relate important issues in the life of our Waldorf School. We are especially glad that so many of you have come. The theme I have chosen for tonight’s lecture is “Educational Practices in an Age of Decline, and the Educational Practices of the Day to Come.” This is no mere theoretical problem for you, now that our Waldorf School has come into being. All the more reason for choosing a theme such as this, so it seemed to me.
A lot has been said about comprehensive schools, but nothing was actually done in this direction until we founded the Waldorf School. This was done out of the recognition that we were meant to take on a great social mission.
298. Rudolf Steiner in the Waldorf School: Address at the assembly at the end of the first school year 24 Jul 1920, Stuttgart
Translated by Catherine E. Creeger

Today, now that we are at the end of our first school year here in our dear Waldorf School, let us inscribe on our souls something of why we are actually in this school. What does it mean that our dear friend Herr Molt, together with Frau Molt, founded this Waldorf School for you, my dear children, and for humankind?
You see, my dear children, here with us it should not happen that as Waldorf School students you say, “Hey, school is over now; it’s vacation. When we'e in school, we have to work hard and learn, but now we can be lazy.
And now, although you will not yet be able to understand it, I would like to say a few words in your presence to your dear teachers, who have now put all the diligent work of the Waldorf School behind them, and I would like to shake their hands. First of all, I would like to shake hands with Herr Molt and Frau Molt for having created this Waldorf School for us so that we can try to do something for humanity in its dire straits.
298. Rudolf Steiner in the Waldorf School: Address at a monthly assembly 23 Nov 1920, Stuttgart
Translated by Catherine E. Creeger

It is certainly easier to climb than the Swiss mountains, but the pleasure we get in climbing up this hill to our dear Waldorf School is a spiritual pleasure more than anything else. It is a spiritual pleasure for us because this is where you, dear children of the Waldorf School, are taught to become good and capable people for life. It has always been a joy to my heart to spend a lot of time in Stuttgart in our dear Waldorf School. This time, I am sorry to say that I will have less time because other work kept me away.
That is what you are meant to become through the Waldorf School. Do it by paying attention, loving your teachers, and working hard! Address and discussion at a parents’ evening!
298. Rudolf Steiner in the Waldorf School: Address and discussion at a parents' evening 13 Jan 1921, Stuttgart
Translated by Catherine E. Creeger

You have chosen to entrust your children’s education to the Waldorf School, which has now been in existence for more than a year. If we want to communicate the Waldorf School’s methods and manner of instruction in a few indications—we do not have time for more than that tonight—it is best to start by mentioning one thing that we need in the Waldorf School much more than in any other school.
That this is not also in the interest of truly healthy individual development is the recognition on which the Waldorf School is founded. The Waldorf School is intended to serve healthy human development above all else.
That is what we really try to cultivate in our Waldorf School as something that is pedagogically and methodologically just as necessary as mere outer skill.
298. Rudolf Steiner in the Waldorf School: Address at the assembly at the end of the second school year 11 Jun 1921, Stuttgart
Translated by Catherine E. Creeger

Your parents were concerned that you grow up to be good, capable people, and they brought you here to this Waldorf School because they believe that the teachers here can teach you to grow up to be good and capable people.
298. Rudolf Steiner in the Waldorf School: Address at the assembly at the beginning of the third school year 18 Jun 1921, Stuttgart
Translated by Catherine E. Creeger

So that you will know that, I want you to promise to work in the Waldorf School. In the Waldorf School we have made sure that you will be able to learn something, and we have also made sure that you will be able to find things you really like.
And you see, if you really understand what is going on when you go to the Waldorf School in the next few days, you may also be able to say, “That’s really nice! Going to the Waldorf School is a nice gift our parents have given us.”
Now that you have made the important and significant decision to send your children to the Waldorf School, we hope that your confidence in the school will be able to grow as you see Waldorf faculty striving to accomplish what you expect of us in educating your children in spirit, body, and soul.
298. Rudolf Steiner in the Waldorf School: Address and discussion at a parents' evening 09 May 1922, Stuttgart
Translated by Catherine E. Creeger

I believe that as parents of Waldorf School children you can see directly, in the beings that are dear to you, what is being done in the Waldorf School and how the relationship of the entire school to the child is conceived.
Today, however, all of you, who can see results in your own flesh and blood of how this Waldorf School is trying to work, must become strong and active defenders and promoters of the Waldorf system of education.
If the parents want the exam to be administered by Waldorf teachers, then the parents would have to take the initiative to bring this about. It is not something that is inherent in Waldorf education.
298. Rudolf Steiner in the Waldorf School: Address at the assembly at the beginning of the fourth school year 20 Jun 1922, Stuttgart
Translated by Catherine E. Creeger

Dear children, dear boys and girls of the Waldorf School! I am going to speak to the very little ones first. Dear children, you have not been to school at all yet, and for you things will be different now than they were before.
Learn to love your teachers just as you learned to love your parents. Think about how your parents sent you to the Waldorf School. They wanted to do the very best thing for you. So do the best you can, too, by really paying attention to what your teachers are doing.
We are constantly trying to get to the bottom of this here in the Waldorf School—how to guide children into life in the best way so that they will be able to do something for their fellow human beings, so that there can be joy in their lives and not just sorrow.
298. Rudolf Steiner in the Waldorf School: Address at the monthly assembly after the burning of the Goetheanum! 01 Mar 1923, Stuttgart
Translated by Catherine E. Creeger

Dear children,1dear boys and girls of the Waldorf School! At the beginning of this assembly, we saw some of your schoolmates give a very good performance in eurythmy.
And in painful moments and in the nights they spend working, it is not only the Waldorf School itself, it is also what lives in you, dear boys and girls, that is the greatest comfort for those who guide you.
When you are sad, it is a comfort to think back on your time in school. You cannot help but realize that here in the Waldorf School your teachers are making an effort to shape your lives so that later, in times of joy and sorrow, your many vivid recollections of the Waldorf School will be a great comfort to you.
298. Rudolf Steiner in the Waldorf School: Address at the assembly at the beginning of the fifth school year 24 Apr 1923, Stuttgart
Translated by Catherine E. Creeger

Last of all I would like to turn to you parents, and to put it to you in a few words that you bring your children to the Waldorf School because you see something special in the being of the Waldorf School. This special character of the Waldorf School is not something to talk about now; we will do that another time.
This is meant to deepen the feeling of responsibility of all of those who work here in the Waldorf School. That is why, dear parents, it should be especially emphasized today, as if we were taking a vow, that we are aware that the holiest of things has been brought here to us.

Results 51 through 60 of 620

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