A Century-old Tradition of
Holistic Education
Founded in Germany in the early 20th century, Waldorf education is an independent and inclusive pedagogy based on the insights and teachings of Rudolf Steiner. Based on a profound understanding of the human spirit and human development, Waldorf education has been successful in different cultures and regions, and has grown to include hundreds of schools worldwide.
For the Waldorf student, music, dance, theater, writing, literature, legends and myths are not simply dry subjects to be read about, ingested, and tested. Rather, they are fully experienced. And through these experiences, Waldorf students cultivate a lifelong love of learning as well as the intellectual, emotional, physical and spiritual capacities to be individuals certain of their paths and to be of service to the world.
The New York Times sparked national media coverage with its front page story on why Silicon Valley parents are turning to Waldorf education. "Preparing for Life" picks up where that story left off, taking viewers inside the Waldorf School of the Peninsula, where the focus is on developing the capacities for creativity, resilience, innovative thinking, and social and emotional intelligence over rote learning. Entrepreneurs, Stanford researchers, investment bankers, and parents who run some of the largest hi-tech companies in the world, weigh-in on what children need to navigate the challenges of the 21st Century in order to find success, purpose, and joy in their lives.
The Waldorf Curriculum
The Waldorf curriculum spans from kindergarten (a combination of what other schools might call “preschool” and kindergarten), to elementary school, and then to middle school. And beyond its core, the curriculum offers instruction in speciality subjects and a rich schedule of festivals. This site includes more detailed information about all of those phases, as well as how to apply to our school.
Electronics and Your Child
Waldorf teachers appreciate that technology must assume a role in education, but at the appropriate developmental stage, when a young person has reached the intellectual maturity to reason abstractly and process concretely on his or her own, which is at around the age of 14. Society might challenge this principle, as many young children are well able to complete sophisticated tasks on a computer; the Waldorf perspective is that computer exposure should not be based on capability but on developmental appropriateness. While many applaud adult-like thinking in young children, we observe that a child’s natural, instinctive, creative and curious way of relating to the world may be repressed when technology is introduced into learning environments at an early age.
- Excerpt from NYTimes Opinion, 5/2014, Author, Beverly Amico
Beyond Waldorf
Professors who have taught Waldorf students across many academic disciplines and across a wide range of campuses—from State Universities to Ivy League—note that Waldorf graduates have the ability to integrate thinking; to assimilate information as opposed to memorizing isolated facts; to be flexible, creative and willing to take intellectual risks; and are leaders with high ethical and moral standards who take initiative and are passionate to reach their goals. Waldorf graduates are highly sought after in higher education.*
“Instead of preparing themselves for college—or more importantly, for life—students spend all of their pre-college years preparing themselves for the moment of admission. What we want is to have students who want to come and work hard because they can leverage their experience at the university and do something after they leave,” said Wesleyan University President Michael Roth. “One of my predecessors used to say to students, ‘If these turn out to be the best four years of your life, we’ve failed you.’” Read more at The Atlantic - March 29, 2016
* Excerpt from www.waldorfeducation.org